It's shocking how little I care for most AAA titles, the last one I enjoyed being Deus Ex: Human Revolution...and that was one break for a VERY long streak of mediocre to bad AAA games.
Then again, this isn't all that surprising to me: The publishers have established an oligopoly of sorts on gaming, where the very best sellers are incredibly stagnant and very derivative of their own franchise (it's always galled me that The Elder Scrolls has been backpedaling in terms of complexity since Morrowind..what? I was supposed to talk about Call of Duty here? Hey, I refer to that franchise as CoD4.X for a reason).
But stagnant gaming sorts itself out over time, and as long as people are enjoying themselves, I shouldn't judge them...as painful as the hype can become at times.
...But then there's the Big Publishers, who seem to be going out of their way to find new ways of de-valuing their own titles by pissing their customers off.
-Ineffective DRM...
-Price-gouging schemes...Day 1 DLC...on-disc DLC you have to pay for...
-Shell-games with consumers rights and the rise of unilateral EULAs...
-Grind where it's not necessary or wanted...(for service-based games)
This is what they offer now: A digital shackle with a legal key, in a "Take it or leave it" deal. Either you play by their rules or you don't play at all: No room for negotiation. No refunds.
So, if they don't want to negotiate, that only leaves Scorched Earth as the remaining option for the consumer: Walking away from their business entirely. It's the only thing they will understand (or perhaps not...maybe they'll just blame piracy instead).
So no, I cannot pity the AAA publishers if their market crashes, and they fall. They brought this on themselves.
I can only sit here with a lyre, and watch as they crumble and burn.
Then again, this isn't all that surprising to me: The publishers have established an oligopoly of sorts on gaming, where the very best sellers are incredibly stagnant and very derivative of their own franchise (it's always galled me that The Elder Scrolls has been backpedaling in terms of complexity since Morrowind..what? I was supposed to talk about Call of Duty here? Hey, I refer to that franchise as CoD4.X for a reason).
But stagnant gaming sorts itself out over time, and as long as people are enjoying themselves, I shouldn't judge them...as painful as the hype can become at times.
...But then there's the Big Publishers, who seem to be going out of their way to find new ways of de-valuing their own titles by pissing their customers off.
-Ineffective DRM...
-Price-gouging schemes...Day 1 DLC...on-disc DLC you have to pay for...
-Shell-games with consumers rights and the rise of unilateral EULAs...
-Grind where it's not necessary or wanted...(for service-based games)
This is what they offer now: A digital shackle with a legal key, in a "Take it or leave it" deal. Either you play by their rules or you don't play at all: No room for negotiation. No refunds.
So, if they don't want to negotiate, that only leaves Scorched Earth as the remaining option for the consumer: Walking away from their business entirely. It's the only thing they will understand (or perhaps not...maybe they'll just blame piracy instead).
So no, I cannot pity the AAA publishers if their market crashes, and they fall. They brought this on themselves.
I can only sit here with a lyre, and watch as they crumble and burn.