And the people in Blizzard North then went on to make Torchlight and Torchlight 2.Elmoth said:Actually a studio that was aquired by Blizzard and renamed Blizzard North made Diablo 2. Then they got rid of them and took it upon themselves to take way too long to make a bad sequel to it.
Just thought you might want to know, I read through Aprilgold's comments twice, I still have no idea what he's talking about.TheKasp said:snip
You gotta admit that some reviews one finds in Amazon are quite funny.DustyDrB said:I'm against always online (though Diablo III and that kind of game in general don't interest me), but Metacritic bombing is just dumb. Review scores have always been pretty irrelevant to me, but now user reviews in general on sites like Metacritic and Amazon have lost all their credibility.
The stuff that's in the game amounts to the game. Everything you have listed impacts the game itself or players' ability to use the game at their convenience. If the game required me to stand on one foot while playing, that's something I would like to see included in a review. Like, if Blizzard wasn't paying their employees enough, that would be awful, but it would be tangential to a review of a specific game. Things like the auction house, DRM, online requirements, art direction, and server access are all legitimate criticisms even if you think they are dumb. They are all things that impact the quality of the game itself.shrekfan246 said:Blizzard has put in a Real-Money Auction House to deter hacking/gold selling things, but have a sub-clause that gives them a percentage of each sale so people are calling them money-grubbing greedy [expletive] [expletive].Smeggs said:I've never played any of the Diablo series, could someone shed some light on this pasionate hatred for D3? I've just been wondering, did they fuck with the gameplay a lot or something? Really bad story? ORIGIN?
Blizzard has implemented the same DRM they used for Starcraft II except in a slightly more harsh manner (Starcraft II prevented you from playing the Skirmish mode without an outside mod if you were offline, but still allowed you to play the campaign; Diablo III spawns campaign things like enemies and loot via the server so without an internet connection you only have half the game) so people are decrying them because of other people who have less-than-solid internet connections.
Blizzard has used a more stylized art direction for Diablo III than the previous two games, which... people are complaining about for some reason.
Blizzard warned gamers that the servers would be bogged down on release day, so when it happened and the servers were down for the better part of yesterday (American at least, I think European/Asian servers were up for most of it) everyone got outraged anyway because... well, it's Blizzard.
I've yet to see any legitimate complaints centered around the game itself and not purely based on the practices of Blizzard surrounding the game. It's fine to not support the company because you don't agree with their decisions, but review-bombing a game because of corporate decisions instead of legitimate gameplay issues is just childish.
That's dumb. They told them that it would be online-only, end of. YOU DO NOT GET to buy it and then complain about it being online only.zombieshark6666 said:I think it's sad that the zeroes will probably be deleted even though people have a right to be angry about not being able to play a single-player game offline. They warned about this before release! I don't care, people should be able to use whatever they purchased.
The funny ones are the reviews that criticize every aspect of the game even though they clearly hadn't played it yet. Such was the case early yesterday with Diablo. Why not just be honest and say you're giving the game a zero because it didn't work when you tried to play it? You actually have a bit of a case there...superbatranger said:You gotta admit that some reviews one finds in Amazon are quite funny.DustyDrB said:I'm against always online (though Diablo III and that kind of game in general don't interest me), but Metacritic bombing is just dumb. Review scores have always been pretty irrelevant to me, but now user reviews in general on sites like Metacritic and Amazon have lost all their credibility.
I saw a flowchart the other day, and I'm going to use it now because your post is far too brash and banal for me to even bother refuting. Opinions are opinions, etc. etc., what bothers you doesn't bother other people, and the only thing I will bother saying is that theThe7Sins said:1. Um wrong. They did it for greed to line there pockets.
2. Agreed.
3. Personally I dislike the art because it doesn't seem like a Diablo game. Seems to bright and happy not dark and gothic. But this is only a matter of opinion and not something I've complained about as it would be a non issue if the game were actually good. But as the game is shit it is 1 more thing against it albeit a minor thing against the game.
4. Really? No legitimate complaints? Well lets see removal of stat customization and skill trees thereby dumbing down the game. The reason for them doing such is obviously to try and ram the pay-to-win auction house down people's throats forcing them to buy the great equipment to be good in the late game whereas in Diablo 2 you could get by on average or just good equipment if your stats were done right. Now you must get the great stuff to be good and unless you get godly drops you will sooner or later have to give your money to Blizzard.
You may not like people's reasons but you can not honestly deny that people do not have valid reason for hating the game.
I actually feel the opposite way, because they were going to make my home state into a game, and I would've hated to see it handled by Obsidian. I loved three, but hated New Vegas to the point that I just couldn't finish it.whiteblood said:Metacritic has been a bad joke for years; I still feel bad that the Makers of Fallout: New Vegas got skimped on a bonus because of one review point.