MornaBaine wrote: »It took me awhile to figure this out but now that I have I will no longer be an "early adopter" of triple A titles. In fact, it's unlikely I'll give another cent to ANY "big company" making games. I'll play this game as long as it remains fun for me to do so...but this is very likely my last "big" MMO entirely and certainly the last I'll support in its development stages and initial release. It's wait and see for a couple of years from now on. It's going to be Indie developers who get my money from now on. Hopefully one of them will eventually make the game I want to play.
Too long to read, with too many repeated close-minded topics. Here is a thing: the game is not broken. The game developers are not broken either. Sure, they make mistakes as everyone else, but this game is in no way bad in terms of business or content.
If you were a game developer, it would not be hard for you to see this. It is a fairly new game that is undergoing big change after a lot of feedback from players.
I'm pretty sure Zenimax does not run a forced work studio either. The people that work for this game are as passionate for games and the elder scrolls series as any player, and therefore they wish to create a game that is appealing for both mmo players and elder scrolls fans. They repeatedly state that they have a lot of fun at work in interviews on their livestream show.
"Humanistic wrote: »There are many companies that do this, one in particular continues to execute it VERY well and their millions of subscriber numbers are there to prove it. They don’t beat around the bush, and they let their players know EXACTLY what is happening – keeping people informed.
darthbelanb14_ESO wrote: »"Humanistic wrote: »There are many companies that do this, one in particular continues to execute it VERY well and their millions of subscriber numbers are there to prove it. They don’t beat around the bush, and they let their players know EXACTLY what is happening – keeping people informed.
Are you referring to Blizzard? Please tell me you're not referring to Blizzard. Unless there's another Blizzard who doesn't treat there players like mindless paying drones.
ers101284b14_ESO wrote: »darthbelanb14_ESO wrote: »"Humanistic wrote: »There are many companies that do this, one in particular continues to execute it VERY well and their millions of subscriber numbers are there to prove it. They don’t beat around the bush, and they let their players know EXACTLY what is happening – keeping people informed.
Are you referring to Blizzard? Please tell me you're not referring to Blizzard. Unless there's another Blizzard who doesn't treat there players like mindless paying drones.
I think he means Square because Yoshi-P the head honcho on Final Fantasy 14 is known to be pretty blatant and open.
darthbelanb14_ESO wrote: »Are you referring to Blizzard? Please tell me you're not referring to Blizzard. Unless there's another Blizzard who doesn't treat there players like mindless paying drones.
ThatNeonZebraAgain wrote: »MornaBaine wrote: »It took me awhile to figure this out but now that I have I will no longer be an "early adopter" of triple A titles. In fact, it's unlikely I'll give another cent to ANY "big company" making games. I'll play this game as long as it remains fun for me to do so...but this is very likely my last "big" MMO entirely and certainly the last I'll support in its development stages and initial release. It's wait and see for a couple of years from now on. It's going to be Indie developers who get my money from now on. Hopefully one of them will eventually make the game I want to play.
Same here. ESO was my first MMO since ~2005, when I stopped playing DAoC (also played WoW for a few months at release, as well as EQ1 and 2, and Lineage 2). I had no idea the scene and industry had changed so much, but now I do. It is very unfortunate that ESO did not use 1.6, the 1-year anniversary, and console release to double-down on being the next big sub-based MMO. Instead, it's looking more and more like B2P was the plan from the start (or at least soon after the start).
ESO captured my attention and imagination just like when I first logged into DAoC over a decade ago, but now it looks like there isn't anything on the horizon that would come close to filling the (real, not B2P) premium, sub-based gap left by ESO's change in financial model. Just gotta wait a couple more years to see how Camelot Unchained pans out now haha.
rawne1980b16_ESO wrote: »darthbelanb14_ESO wrote: »Are you referring to Blizzard? Please tell me you're not referring to Blizzard. Unless there's another Blizzard who doesn't treat there players like mindless paying drones.
Gotta agree with ers, Yoshi is pretty blunt and honest and FF14 does have millions of players.
Can't imagine he's talking about Blizzard. They tend to treat their players like walking wallets. Who can blame them though, that sparkle horse they first sold in their cash shop made them millions.
Rescorla_ESO wrote: »I always get a chuckle when I read someone imply game developers are not passionate about their games. I think that is a silly point and nowhere close to the truth. The OP claims to be a game developer. OK I will give him the benefit of the doubt. I am a software engineer myself but there is no way in the world I would ever consider working as a game developer because to do so I would have to take massive salary cut. In other words, salary compensation for software engineers working in the gaming industry is significantly less than what they could make in the corporate business world.
Now I don't presume to speak for all of them, but I imagine the large majority of game developers are willing to work for a lower salary because 1) they are gamers themselves and 2) they are as passionate about their work and enjoy creating a product that provides entertainment to other people.
TLDR: I gave the OP a LOL
Humanistic wrote: »Rescorla_ESO wrote: »I always get a chuckle when I read someone imply game developers are not passionate about their games. I think that is a silly point and nowhere close to the truth. The OP claims to be a game developer. OK I will give him the benefit of the doubt. I am a software engineer myself but there is no way in the world I would ever consider working as a game developer because to do so I would have to take massive salary cut. In other words, salary compensation for software engineers working in the gaming industry is significantly less than what they could make in the corporate business world.
Now I don't presume to speak for all of them, but I imagine the large majority of game developers are willing to work for a lower salary because 1) they are gamers themselves and 2) they are as passionate about their work and enjoy creating a product that provides entertainment to other people.
TLDR: I gave the OP a LOL
You're basically telling me that a game developer's passion for games results in more and more useless games that people have already played before. You can't sit here and tell me that the Call of Duty team is passionate about releasing Call of Duty 6,000 because they are "passionate" about "making a great game". They're passionate about money, plain and simple.
Rescorla_ESO wrote: »Humanistic wrote: »Rescorla_ESO wrote: »I always get a chuckle when I read someone imply game developers are not passionate about their games. I think that is a silly point and nowhere close to the truth. The OP claims to be a game developer. OK I will give him the benefit of the doubt. I am a software engineer myself but there is no way in the world I would ever consider working as a game developer because to do so I would have to take massive salary cut. In other words, salary compensation for software engineers working in the gaming industry is significantly less than what they could make in the corporate business world.
Now I don't presume to speak for all of them, but I imagine the large majority of game developers are willing to work for a lower salary because 1) they are gamers themselves and 2) they are as passionate about their work and enjoy creating a product that provides entertainment to other people.
TLDR: I gave the OP a LOL
You're basically telling me that a game developer's passion for games results in more and more useless games that people have already played before. You can't sit here and tell me that the Call of Duty team is passionate about releasing Call of Duty 6,000 because they are "passionate" about "making a great game". They're passionate about money, plain and simple.
I am more than willing to reconsider my opinion if you can provide any documented evidence that CoD developers don't take pride in their work, are not passionate about creating a quality game, they consider their game "useless"' etc. I would argue that the success of that franchise is largely because the developers are passionate about creating a quality, entertaining gaming experience.
Humanistic wrote: »Rescorla_ESO wrote: »Humanistic wrote: »Rescorla_ESO wrote: »I always get a chuckle when I read someone imply game developers are not passionate about their games. I think that is a silly point and nowhere close to the truth. The OP claims to be a game developer. OK I will give him the benefit of the doubt. I am a software engineer myself but there is no way in the world I would ever consider working as a game developer because to do so I would have to take massive salary cut. In other words, salary compensation for software engineers working in the gaming industry is significantly less than what they could make in the corporate business world.
Now I don't presume to speak for all of them, but I imagine the large majority of game developers are willing to work for a lower salary because 1) they are gamers themselves and 2) they are as passionate about their work and enjoy creating a product that provides entertainment to other people.
TLDR: I gave the OP a LOL
You're basically telling me that a game developer's passion for games results in more and more useless games that people have already played before. You can't sit here and tell me that the Call of Duty team is passionate about releasing Call of Duty 6,000 because they are "passionate" about "making a great game". They're passionate about money, plain and simple.
I am more than willing to reconsider my opinion if you can provide any documented evidence that CoD developers don't take pride in their work, are not passionate about creating a quality game, they consider their game "useless"' etc. I would argue that the success of that franchise is largely because the developers are passionate about creating a quality, entertaining gaming experience.
I'm willing to reconsider my opinion if you can provide any documented evidence that THEY DO. Pride and passion are two completely different things. I've seen people do extremely shotty work (with more than just games), and think they've done the best work known to man - completely ignorant to the fact that what they did was horrid.
I guess we can't all afford the luxury of having passionate game developers, just like we can't afford the luxury of changing the game rules.
Humanistic wrote: »
Humanistic wrote: »
Look up any article detailing Harlan Ellison's (successful) suit against Cameron for plagiarising Ellison's story "Soldier." Ellison not only won a monetary settlement, all copies of The Terminator now have to have “Acknowledgement To the Works of Harlan Ellison” in the end credits.
Rescorla_ESO wrote: »Now I don't presume to speak for all of them, but I imagine the large majority of game developers are willing to work for a lower salary because 1) they are gamers themselves and 2) they are as passionate about their work and enjoy creating a product that provides entertainment to other people.
TLDR: I gave the OP a LOL