I don't think I proved your point as much as I think you think I did. *giggle*Zachary Amaranth said:Remind me: is Sony still selling Battlefield 4 on PSN? They are? Well, that sounds like a really bad reason to refuse the service.Kameburger said:yes absolutely; EA needs quality control. But I mean I think my though overall is that PSN shouldn't even think about allowing EA's system until it's completely free of bugs etc and even then I'm not sure if they should.
Maybe Sony shouldn't sell them. Hell, Sony features a good chunk of them on their storefront.Half of their games don't even work online when they're released.
To the contrary, I'm not arguing player choice is lost, I'm arguing that the premise is a non-issue because the "quality control" angle is a farce.So while I agree with you that there is an element of players choice that is lost,
You've kind of proved my point. Sony has no problem selling you broken, shitty games. They don't care about QA, they don't care about the customer. Something else is up here, because this being their line in the sand is absurd enough that Weird Al passed on it.
Would you still sell their broken games to customers like yourself? That, I think, would be more telling of where you really stand.I can't tell you how pissed I was about the process of playing battlefield 3 online and how it burned me and how I wished in that moment that they had just integrated their games in with a system that worked like Steam or PSN or even XBL. So yeah I don't trust EA, and if I had a platform that my customers used, I wouldn't go rushing to cut myself out of the process for them.
From my point of view, BF3 didn't work for me because EA employ's a stupid online pass system, for a few reasons, I had a lot of trouble with this online pass primarily because EA's payment system and PSN's were in no way connected and thus there were various difficulties that I won't get into now. My point is this, EA let me down because EA sucked, and PSN didn't step in and say, wait this system sucks and we don't want you to use this on your platform. So in a way, my inability to play the game comes from a lack of quality control on the part of Sony.
I don't care what Sony sells on their store front because I'm free to buy it as it comes or free to not buy it. I am not forced into a contract within a contract, in order to access for my product from a limited space within a limited space.
Let me put it this way, EA's games being shit are really irrelevant to whats going on here, it's just a good result of what actually happened which is that EA tried to set up it's own store within someone else's store, and that person refused. Apple doesn't allow google to make a google play store for Itunes because it circumvents their design for customer experience. The same way PSN shouldn't let any company, not just EA, set up shop in their territory because it deprives them of the ability to control what goes on, which when customers are unhappy (and it's EA so that's a certainty) Sony would have less ways to say, hey this isn't what we want here for [Reasons].
Also if I said broken, I didn't mean in the non functional sense, I mean from a design standpoint which is different. The games you buy from PSN work as they are intended, it's just that EA intends for them to be anti-consumer garbage. It's not like I mean if toys R Us sold broken toys but rather if Toy's R us sold stupid toys that were hard to play with.
so the tl;dr of it all is really I don't care what they sell to be honest, but I think they have every right to decide how they sell what they sell, and I think they did most of their customers a favor by not giving EA license to do what ever they want in their ecosystem.