lacktheknack said:
ExiusXavarus said:
If I'm going to be playing Single Player, by myself, why do I need to be connected to the internet to play? :l
You don't... you need to be connected for thirty seconds every two weeks.
Okay, even assuming that this won't inconvenience the user in any way (big assumption, but let's just bear with it for a second) the question still remains: why should I condone with my purchase of their product a decision by a company to alter their product in any way that does nothing to make it a more desirable product to the end user?
Sure we can accept that, ultimately, it's their product and they as a company can sell it with whatever reservations they can legally get away with but this does nothing to answer my question; I do not doubt that they
can do whatever they wish with their product, I question why
I should condone their doing anything with the product that in no way adds to its ability to sate my demands of it.
The immediate, and insufficient, retort to this argument is 'why should you care if the changes do nothing to negatively affect your gaming experience?'. This argument does not work because even if we assume that any changes to the product do nothing to negatively nor positively impact my experience of the product, the fact still remains that when I purchase a product I am purchasing the entire project, not just those aspects of it that I like, and in doing so I express my approval of a business strategy which wastes time and money doing things that in no way improve the end user's experience. I do not approve of such a business strategy: everything the company does should be an attempt to improve the end user's satisfaction with the product so time spent creating facets of the product which do not fulfil this goal is time (and ergo money) wasted.
The next retort to this argument is that the decision by Blizzard to monitor, however briefly, our game is done in our best interests as an attempt to prevent cheating. I do not consider this an improvement. I do not consider a
more limitedly accessible game an improvement over a
less limitedly accessible game. If I want to change a facet of the game, be it hexing my character or changing the texture of something that gives me a headache, then forcing me to choose between doing this and passing an integrity check is not a benefit to me. I would far rather have a game full of cheaters than accept limited access. Yet this dichotomy is false: Valve has already shown that it is possible to allow users to host their own servers with any combination of security checks provided by VAC, from integrity checks to application monitoring. Blizzard wants to unnecessarily homogenise my gaming experience and centralise control over content, this is not something I wish to condone.