Vausch said:
War Z was broken in its terrible glitches, bully tactics by the developers, and was so poor it was taken off Steam.
Diablo III was broken at its time of launch due to the terrible always-online DRM that causes so many to be unable to play something they paid for, yet pirates could play no problem. People defended it because "it's Diablo".
Steel Battalion for the Kinect was a defective product. No getting around that, it just didn't work, it was defective and if it were any other sort of product it would be recalled and probably couldn't legally be sold.
Now I'm not talking about games with glitches, in this day and age that's something that's bound to happen. Heck it's been happening since gaming started, but most of them aren't so bad they completely ruin the game. So why do we accept broken games?
Much of what I hear for WarZ is "its fun". As if thats supposed to excuse a broken game that was in Alpha being sold as a complete and full version. Quite frankly I dont understand how anyone could make an argument that the game was anything other then an unfinished and broken alpha. STEAM did the right thing by pulling the game and giving refunds but really WarZ should have never been on STEAM in the first place. Its yet another case where STEAM puts up buggy or broken games without any quality assurance while good games that are finished havnt even made it onto their service yet.
In Diablo 3's case, well yeah it was broken when it came out. Error 37 was a huge controversy and gamers called it by saying it would be a problem unless blizzard had their servers running like clockwork. How people defended that game I have no idea but I didnt buy it myself (I got bored with diablo when Diablo 2 was still new)
Finally theres steel battalion and you're right again, its a broken game. Why gamers in mass have not filed complaints with the federal trade commission is beyond me.
What I think all this comes down to is people dont want to take the necessary steps to protect their consumer rights. If people dont file complaints with the FTC or BBB (Better Business bureau) is IMO out of lazyness. In all three cases the games were literally released as broken titles and while Diablo got fixed later thats still no excuse for gamers not filing complaints. Its like gamers dont know what their rights as consumers are or they just chalk it up to another crappy game
Thing is when you get a defective product that is not just a crappy game and you shouldnt let it slip. Thats actually a violation of your consumer rights but we dont have large ammounts of people doing anything about it. So game companies arent held accountable. We saw some complaints filed for ME3 but theres no legal case there for consumer rights, just for false advertising. It's a shame were in this position because of peoples inaction but I kind of wonder if people arent reporting these defective games because they dont know they should or they dont know who to report it to and how (to be fair the FTC's reporting fuction is pretty crap)