Araneae6537 wrote: »Exactly, it’s amazing how many people have no idea what the term “pay to win” legitimately refers to and just use it to mean they should get everything for free. You can buy the chapter, probably on sale on several months, or if you have ESO+, you’ll get access included next year. The game costs money just to run, not to mention create new content. If you don’t pay for it in any way, there’s no reason why you should have access.
Araneae6537 wrote: »Exactly, it’s amazing how many people have no idea what the term “pay to win” legitimately refers to and just use it to mean they should get everything for free. You can buy the chapter, probably on sale on several months, or if you have ESO+, you’ll get access included next year. The game costs money just to run, not to mention create new content. If you don’t pay for it in any way, there’s no reason why you should have access.
i dont think you understand what the term actually refers to.
pay to win means involving or relating to the practice of paying to get weapons, abilities, etc. that give you an advantage over players who do not spend money.
Abilities meaning the key word here.
i dont think many of you are understanding the concept. The same thing was said when people didnt have access to the warden classes other than buying the expansion, same thing with jewelry crafting. Now that isnt the case because you cannot unlock the means to use it period unless you pay for the expansion. This is a completely new system that is overtuned and very powerful.
Hes right, it is pay to win, if it wasnt, scribing would be available to the masses in some way. Be it a scribing table you can put in your guild hall, or buying the ability with crowns, etc.
i dont think many of you are understanding the concept. The same thing was said when people didnt have access to the warden classes other than buying the expansion, same thing with jewelry crafting. Now that isnt the case because you cannot unlock the means to use it period unless you pay for the expansion. This is a completely new system that is overtuned and very powerful.
Hes right, it is pay to win, if it wasnt, scribing would be available to the masses in some way. Be it a scribing table you can put in your guild hall, or buying the ability with crowns, etc.
In wow you cant even get to max level unless you have the latest expansion.
Scribing is NOT p2w, sorry.
VinnyGambini wrote: »i dont think many of you are understanding the concept. The same thing was said when people didnt have access to the warden classes other than buying the expansion, same thing with jewelry crafting. Now that isnt the case because you cannot unlock the means to use it period unless you pay for the expansion. This is a completely new system that is overtuned and very powerful.
Hes right, it is pay to win, if it wasnt, scribing would be available to the masses in some way. Be it a scribing table you can put in your guild hall, or buying the ability with crowns, etc.
In wow you cant even get to max level unless you have the latest expansion.
Scribing is NOT p2w, sorry.
In League of Legends you pay only for skins, visuals etc, and this buisness model runs perfectly fine.
I'm not buying statement, that you need to pay, because game cost money just to run. There are free mmo games that run with above buisness model with success.
Clear pay2win for me.
You mean the obsolete game model that substitutes braindead grinding for actual content? ESO is a theme park, and the PvP ride has nothing to do with flower picking. It should be treated like any other competitive PvP game. I would infinitely prefer paying for gear like you would an IRL sports team, over wasting my time on braindead garbage for hours just to unlock what I paid $40 for. PvP is already its own content, we don't need braindead grind to get us playing.MMO
This I can agree with, those gave you a huge advantage in PvP at the time. Scribing is nowhere near that. There's a few skills that are really good on a few builds, but zero specs for which Scribing is mandatory.Turtle_Bot wrote: »The closest thing this game has ever had that could be considered "pay-to-win" was the original oakensoul and malacath
xylena_lazarow wrote: »You mean the obsolete game model that substitutes braindead grinding for actual content?
ESO PvP has more in common with League than it does with its own casual PvE. It should be treated as a PvP game, not casual MMO content where you pick flowers and talk to robots in between waiting for time gates. Obsolete MMO grind walls players from engaging in the PvP due to the time it takes to grind arena weapons, Hakeijos, gold mats, etc. Obsolete MMO grind is inherently incompatible with competitive gaming, because it's purely time wasted spent, not skill.Comparing this game to any MOBA is just incorrect on many levels. This is also a reason why PvP population is more or less stale and will not rapidly grow.
What makes you think that they are moving in this direction?xylena_lazarow wrote: »Obsolete MMO grind is inherently incompatible with competitive gaming, because it's purely time wasted spent, not skill.
xylena_lazarow wrote: »
What makes you think that they are moving in this direction?xylena_lazarow wrote: »Obsolete MMO grind is inherently incompatible with competitive gaming, because it's purely time wasted spent, not skill.
Everything they've done so far tells us they want PvP to be fun and casual, not competitive sport.
Yeah it's rough but it's not that bleak. We get plenty of new players on meatbags on the walls, learning where to put oils on the inner, running basic tank sustain heal spam builds, fixing walls, sitting on back keeps calling out PvDoor, etc... it's sad that Scribing is gated behind not just a paywall but also dozens of hours of soul crushing grind tedium, because skills like Repelling Explosion are awesome for casual players to use in zerg fights.Joy_Division wrote: »There is absolutely nothing a casual or below-average player can do at all on their own to help their alliance.
They did adjust Rush of Agony, but as usual they accidentally improved it for ball group play. The scribed pull is kind of meh but it changes the mechanics a bit so with practice it might be decent as opposed to a 5 piece set.xylena_lazarow wrote: »
They didn't. They are just too incompetent to fix it, so they've stopped trying.