This. Pretty much said what needed to be said. As one who was admittedly on the "it ruins the integrity of the game" team, I'll admit Jim had me swayed a bit. He makes some good points.Alex Mac said:I don't necessarily thing that consumers are in any true position to make executive decisions about the content of a game. Not in any true, appreciable fashion. Fans should realize that their feedback is not a sacrosanct, binding thing. The failure of this whole fiasco has never truly been on the part of the developers. Even acknowledging that the ending of ME3 is not perfect by any stretch of the imagination, I think that fan response and the philosophy behind it has been fundamentally misinformed as to the power they wield as consumers and just exactly what their time and money means.
It certainly gives them the right to criticize. To comment. To analyze. To express satisfaction or dissatisfaction.
I don't think it really entitles them to make claims about what a series "deserves" or even what they "deserve" as purchasers of art/entertainment. Many people want to imply that their previous time and money somehow gives them a creative voice in the game and what should/shouldn't be in it. But that's short sighted, I feel. No consumer or group of consumers literally commissioned BioWare to make the game to their specifications and desires. Failure to meet certain expectations falls much more on the fanbase themselves rather than the developers, I feel.
That said, expressing a certain disappointment is certainly understandable. But very little of this has been done in a general healthy fashion in terms of fostering the proper type of communication channels consumers might have with developers. The tactics employed have been fundamentally dishonest and backhanded, to such an extent that it will likely have a negative effect in the long run in terms of the fan/developer dynamic.
But to be honest, I don't really care about the fate of the Mass Effect franchise. It was the bloody entitlement that got under my skin. The whole "I deserve a better ending because I played all 3 games!"
But Jim was indeed fair, with the disclaimer about how fan decision can't be an absolute factor in the creative process. And that's good enough for me.