Jago1130 said:
Genocidicles said:
Jago1130 said:
lol yes, it IS THE SAME... FM5 dev stated so in an interview. FM5 has same capability offline.
The console doesn't have an offline capacity for more than 24 hours though. So good luck playing your 'offline' game on a console that needs to be online.
Jago1130 said:
Not sure how I can make this more clear for you. And still you cannot provide me with one thing that will be different about owning each game, aside from being easier to share.
Well with FM4, it's yours for as long you can look after the disc and your console. Whereas with FM5, Microsoft can just take it away from you because they longer want to support the xbone.
Wrong.
FM5 can be played beyond the 24 hours, even if the console is not online. Straight from the dev. There is no difference. And seeing as how you're wrong on this one, and have failed to give me another, I'm going to accept that as your concession that you can't make an argument that owning FM5 has less rights than owning FM4. Invalidating your argument that ownership rights are tossed by buying that game.
Absolutely incorrect. Straight from the console developers, as in Microsoft, without that constant 24h check-in, you CANNOT play any games on your XBoxOne, until it has completed it's login check with MS's servers.
Just as, if your turn off the Kinect, your XBox one itself will be turned off (they are linked)
Just as, you will no longer actually own a physical copy of FM5, so if your HDisk fails, or your data gets corrupted, you can not play. However with FM4, if your data fails or is corrupted or your 360's HD fails, you can still play the game,
Hwever, you are missing the broader aspect, and continuing to see things from a small window. Its not about how owning a copy if a game vs having access to the data (b/c that's the situation, you own FM4, you will only have permission and access to FM5), its actually about other things. But, I won't bother to enlighten you, feel free to go n and keep enjoying the same game with a different number on the end of it, because you have already failed at being intelligent, just by virtue of the fact that you are comparing 2 games that are essentially identical to each other in the first place, just a few superficial changes. God I hope your also not one of those Madden or CoD or Halo fans, b/c they get an even worse stick.
Did I miss anything ¿
Oh yea..
OT
This kind of thing has been around for a long time, some if the more recent games for the SNES and Genesis had those clauses in the EULA, its fine actually... its a corperate protection against class action suits which can be particularly devastating to a company as they would have to pay not only those listed within the class-action group, but every purchaser. Individual litigation is much easier for companies to handle, are a lot quicker, and generally don't reach court-rooms where judges and juries can issue enormous sums of awards to either party.