Acrisius said:You shouldn't have bought a car if you knew you would possibly run out of fuel and be pissed about it. And you have no right to be pissed, because you knew it could happen.Daystar Clarion said:Well that's an issue with your ISP, not the game devs.ToastiestZombie said:What if you've payed for the game. You've got an amazing internet connection, one that never goes down. You play say act 1, then BAM something happens that turns off your internet. No game for you, you've wasted your 50 pounds. They didn't know that was going to happen, but due to the crappy DRM they can't play singleplayer without internet. Yeah sure, you can counter this by saying "Well, you buy a car even though the next day you might crash/it get eaten by truckosaurus". But Diablo 3 is very different because it's a game, and it's the companies fault that you can't play SP when your internet's down.Daystar Clarion said:What?ToastiestZombie said:I really don't get this argument. It's like saying "If you knew anything about ME3, then you knew it had 'tacked on multiplayer'. If you don't like that then you shouldn't of bought the game. I think buying the game should give you the right to play it, so doing something like this is fine. Also, what if the person wasn't bothered by the DRM, but his internet becomes shitty one day and now he can't play the game. He has every right to be pissed off/play a pirated version.Daystar Clarion said:If you knew anything about the game, then you knew it was 'always online'.
If this bothered you, then you shouldn't have bought the game.
You don't need to play ME3's multiplayer to play the single player game, so I don't understand the comparison.
You agree to the terms of service when you boot up the game for the first time. Don't like those terms, don't play the game.
I don't agree with their methods, but if people are going to throw money at them, despite draconian DRM, then they're gonna keep doing it.
Much like saying it's Ford's fault that I can't run my car because my local petrol station has ran out of fuel.
That Metaphore is so bad... Let's keep from using real-world metaphores on this one. No one is harmed by you downloading somthing that you already own and have paid for, and no one is lacking compensation. So I don't see why it wouldn't be ethical.Daystar Clarion said:Well that's an issue with your ISP, not the game devs.ToastiestZombie said:What if you've payed for the game. You've got an amazing internet connection, one that never goes down. You play say act 1, then BAM something happens that turns off your internet. No game for you, you've wasted your 50 pounds. They didn't know that was going to happen, but due to the crappy DRM they can't play singleplayer without internet. Yeah sure, you can counter this by saying "Well, you buy a car even though the next day you might crash/it get eaten by truckosaurus". But Diablo 3 is very different because it's a game, and it's the companies fault that you can't play SP when your internet's down.Daystar Clarion said:What?ToastiestZombie said:I really don't get this argument. It's like saying "If you knew anything about ME3, then you knew it had 'tacked on multiplayer'. If you don't like that then you shouldn't of bought the game. I think buying the game should give you the right to play it, so doing something like this is fine. Also, what if the person wasn't bothered by the DRM, but his internet becomes shitty one day and now he can't play the game. He has every right to be pissed off/play a pirated version.Daystar Clarion said:If you knew anything about the game, then you knew it was 'always online'.
If this bothered you, then you shouldn't have bought the game.
You don't need to play ME3's multiplayer to play the single player game, so I don't understand the comparison.
You agree to the terms of service when you boot up the game for the first time. Don't like those terms, don't play the game.
I don't agree with their methods, but if people are going to throw money at them, despite draconian DRM, then they're gonna keep doing it.
Much like saying it's Ford's fault that I can't run my car because my local petrol station has ran out of fuel.
I've got to agree with Daystar. Blizzard told us about the always online thing well in advance of the game's release and made sure we all were well aware that it was going to be there. So I suggest that you just sit back and wait for your Internet connection to come back, maybe play something else in the meantime. Although if it's really so bad that you need a "fix" then I'd suggest you forget about your friend's pirated version and consult an addictions counselor.Daystar Clarion said:If you knew anything about the game, then you knew it was 'always online'.
If this bothered you, then you shouldn't have bought the game.
Kind of stretching it a bit thereAcrisius said:You shouldn't have bought a car if you knew you would possibly run out of fuel and be pissed about it. And you have no right to be pissed, because you knew it could happen.Daystar Clarion said:Well that's an issue with your ISP, not the game devs.ToastiestZombie said:What if you've payed for the game. You've got an amazing internet connection, one that never goes down. You play say act 1, then BAM something happens that turns off your internet. No game for you, you've wasted your 50 pounds. They didn't know that was going to happen, but due to the crappy DRM they can't play singleplayer without internet. Yeah sure, you can counter this by saying "Well, you buy a car even though the next day you might crash/it get eaten by truckosaurus". But Diablo 3 is very different because it's a game, and it's the companies fault that you can't play SP when your internet's down.Daystar Clarion said:What?ToastiestZombie said:I really don't get this argument. It's like saying "If you knew anything about ME3, then you knew it had 'tacked on multiplayer'. If you don't like that then you shouldn't of bought the game. I think buying the game should give you the right to play it, so doing something like this is fine. Also, what if the person wasn't bothered by the DRM, but his internet becomes shitty one day and now he can't play the game. He has every right to be pissed off/play a pirated version.Daystar Clarion said:If you knew anything about the game, then you knew it was 'always online'.
If this bothered you, then you shouldn't have bought the game.
You don't need to play ME3's multiplayer to play the single player game, so I don't understand the comparison.
You agree to the terms of service when you boot up the game for the first time. Don't like those terms, don't play the game.
I don't agree with their methods, but if people are going to throw money at them, despite draconian DRM, then they're gonna keep doing it.
Much like saying it's Ford's fault that I can't run my car because my local petrol station has ran out of fuel.
I think that pretty much sums it up. They have the money from the purchase, you couldn't play Diablo during the internet downtime anyway and you do plan to use the 'legit' copy the second you can again (So you're open to spending more at the auction house).Woodsey said:They have your money, go nuts.
From what I've gathered, the furor has been less "oh my god always-online, kill the heretic!" and more "fucking hell? the servers are down again?!".tippy2k2 said:Yes, it is still unethical. Everyone is acting like this is a giant slap in the face of gamers and they were blind-sided by this but you all KNEW that this was the case. I think my mother, who barely knows what my Wiistation 360 is, knew that Diablo 3 needed to be online to use. Now I haven't bought the game but if this "online-only" fact has evaded you, I would assume it's on the box somewhere.
People ***** and complain about this kind of practice and then they bend over and present themselves when a game they want comes out. You knew what bed you were getting into here, now you get to sleep in it.
100% Ethical.Moth_Monk said:My question is: Would it be ethical to install and play the pirated copy of the game?
Now remember, I am not asking whether it would be legal to do this, just whether it would be ethical. Also remember that laws are not always ethical.
The same can be said for most/all MMOs and I don't see bloodthirsty mobs forming to review bomb & scream about how they can't play whenever that happens (and I've seen MMOs that have far less MMO in them than Diablo III does.)Agayek said:but the servers regularly crash and/or are taken down for maintenance, and when that happens, you can't play the game you paid for. It's a perfectly legitimate grievance. If they were going to implement an always-online thing, they should have the infrastructure in place so that their customers can play the game at any and every time, and that's really all there is to it.
A EULA (notice that it's an 'agreement' and not a 'contract') has no legal standing, you did not sign it, hitting the 'accept' button is not the same as placing your physical signature on a document.TheKasp said:Legally? I did not read the EULA of D3 but I'm sure they have a paragraph forbidding that so no.