Euphbug said:
Only once have I felt really screwed over by a pre-order, and that was with BRINK. In fact me and a decent group of fellas pre-ordered that one and we were gonna have an awesome time playing together...at least until we found out it sucked. Besides that I have had a pretty solid time with any game I decided to pre-order.
Same here. And I remember they decided to release it a day early on PC. Wtf was that all about?
To be honest, there were a few moments I've had with the game when it reached levels of greatness. When the game actually played the way it was allegedly meant to play. With two full teams of people playing their classes well, and fighting for objectives... it was pretty awesome.
Unfortunately, the rampant gamebreaking bugs and horrendous rubber-banding made the game unbearable to play. It had so much promise, but in the end, thanks to the game breaking bugs and performance issues - I felt screwed.
babinro said:
I preordered Resident Evil 6 Anthology knowing that RE6 was going to have no 'survival horror' elements to it.
The game itself was unbearable. Thankfully the pack came with RE1-5.
I don't own RE 1-3 and never played through all of 2 or 3.
In the end the game was worth the money because of the time spent with the classics.
RE6 on the other hand isn't even worth $10.00 IMO.
I too pre-ordered the RE6 anthology... but I'm one of those people that actually liked RE6 lol.
Of course having the rest of the franchise is great too.
jollybarracuda said:
Even if there's no incentive, I don't see the problem. Maybe I have the money now and want to get the payment process out of the way?
Admittedly, this is a big reason why I pre-order. Some fairly recent preorders by me were made for this reason alone.
Bhaalspawn said:
Actually, as a PC Gamer, I found a great tactic to cancel Pre Orders after the release date.
DON'T BUY THEM ON STEAM. BUY THEM AT GAMESTOP
Well shit, I never thought about that.
I'll have to start looking into this. Valve's approach for pre-orders is too damned heavy-handed, it'd be nice to make a small investment and take it back after release if I see the need to.
I remember back when I was young, I'd preorder games at dedicated game stores because they really
would run out of stock.
And big box stores like Best Buy wouldn't stock new releases until several days after their release date.
But now it seems that every big box store is crammed to the brim with new releases the moment they come out, and even do midnight releases. Dedicated game stores intentionally get a small amount of shelf copies to make pre-orders seem necessary. But I can't remember the last time I wasn't able to find a game I really wanted on release day. It's been
years.