Midgardian wrote: »That was confirmed BEFORE the early access even happened. They announced it because of problems with retailers sending the game later than launch day. It has nothing to do with the down time.
Midgardian wrote: »That was confirmed BEFORE the early access even happened. They announced it because of problems with retailers sending the game later than launch day. It has nothing to do with the down time.
Whatever lol. At least people will be happy they are still getting an extended day.
darkkterror_ESO wrote: »Not to look a gift horse in the mouth, but how does extending the grace period to Sunday (a day which most delivery services do not deliver on) help cover people who ordered physical copies from retailers that did not ship in time to make release day?
Hey man, I'm trying haha.Spectral_Lord wrote: »Your post doesn't carry enough weight to stop all those people will complain. For that matter, nobody's posts do. If one person starts complaining about something, more will follow.
IF I DON’T RECEIVE MY RETAIL EDITION ON LAUNCH DAY, WILL I BE ABLE TO PLAY AFTER EARLY ACCESS?
Updated 03/26/2014 11:55 PM Published 02/15/2014 12:13 PM
Following the Early Access period, players who pre-ordered retail editions of The Elder Scrolls Online will have a 48-hour grace period to enter their retail edition game codes. During this time, they will be able to play ESO as normal. After April 6, any account that has not redeemed a game code will no longer have game access, but the account will be reactivated once a game code is redeemed
Complaining, the one, true constant among MMOs.
darkkterror_ESO wrote: »Not to look a gift horse in the mouth, but how does extending the grace period to Sunday (a day which most delivery services do not deliver on) help cover people who ordered physical copies from retailers that did not ship in time to make release day?
Because they can keep playing on Sunday and the following day their orders arrive with their game time. That way they don't lose Sunday playtime.
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Midgardian wrote: »I'm often confused by this sort of "anti-complaining" contingent as I am by a complaining contingent. Yes, complaining is often counter-productive, but so is complaining about complaining. Some people complain about everything, some people complain about everything people complain about.
Complaining is often healthy. Businesses shouldn't be allowed to do whatever they want just because they are offering the service. Not everyone is complaining because they feel "entitled" or any other stupid way of lumping people together.
The idea that dissent is never valuable is not a good way to think and, even if this is just an MMO forum, is a huge lapse in reason.