That's a terrible, terrible idea. Zero review -> malicious add-ons all over the place -> bad reputation for all add-ons.michaelb14a_ESO2 wrote: »I agree actually. To be perfectly honest, I think ZOS should make give add-on devs the OPTION to obfuscate the Lua, at least opening the door for charging a fair price for well supported and developed addons.
man you post a lot...... majority complaint threads lol if someone buys you that silly ice mount would you stop?
Not trying to sound like an A hole, just asking a serious questionSeems (to me) like it is all about money.......
You and your 'friends' have dull conversation's.
lordrichter wrote: »My thought is that game mods and addons are hobbies, not jobs.
That's a terrible, terrible idea. Zero review -> malicious add-ons all over the place -> bad reputation for all add-ons.
michaelb14a_ESO2 wrote: »I agree actually. To be perfectly honest, I think ZOS should make give add-on devs the OPTION to obfuscate the Lua, at least opening the door for charging a fair price for well supported and developed addons. Going a step further, an official ZOS hosted addon site for developers would allow ZOS to get their piece.
That's a sure-fire way to discourage people from using your addons at all. Player psychology 101.I'm curious if there is the possibility of building ads into a mod. Maybe a popup or a little window in the corner. Make it closeable with a prompt explaining that keeping it open will help provide you with revenue. Maybe even provide a version without ads for 'ethical' reasons.
AlienDiplomat wrote: »man you post a lot...... majority complaint threads lol if someone buys you that silly ice mount would you stop?
Not trying to sound like an A hole, just asking a serious questionSeems (to me) like it is all about money.......
You and your 'friends' have dull conversation's.
Deltia posts a thread with a negative view of a ZOS system and gets nothing but praise, being a streamer. Addon author posts an observation of the disparity, gets hated on and trolled. Thank you for proving my point about the warped psychology of some gamers.
AlienDiplomat wrote: »man you post a lot...... majority complaint threads lol if someone buys you that silly ice mount would you stop?
Not trying to sound like an A hole, just asking a serious questionSeems (to me) like it is all about money.......
You and your 'friends' have dull conversation's.
Deltia posts a thread with a negative view of a ZOS system and gets nothing but praise, being a streamer. Addon author posts an observation of the disparity, gets hated on and trolled. Thank you for proving my point about the warped psychology of some gamers.lordrichter wrote: »My thought is that game mods and addons are hobbies, not jobs.
So is streaming, or making guides. Doesn't stop them from monetizing and earning a side-stream for their time and effort. No reason addon authors shouldn't have the same opportunity.That's a terrible, terrible idea. Zero review -> malicious add-ons all over the place -> bad reputation for all add-ons.
There is no such thing as a "malicious" addon. That is a paranoid myth created by the ill-informed. Addons can only do things that are exposed to the API. It isn't possible to code them to do anything ZOS doesn't let them do.michaelb14a_ESO2 wrote: »I agree actually. To be perfectly honest, I think ZOS should make give add-on devs the OPTION to obfuscate the Lua, at least opening the door for charging a fair price for well supported and developed addons. Going a step further, an official ZOS hosted addon site for developers would allow ZOS to get their piece.
Bethesda had a great idea with the modding marketplace for Skyrim. However the community proved to be extremely selfish, greeding, and evil. They attacked the modders that attempted to support the system, openly bragged about pirating their intellectual property, and cried and whined about Bethesda taking away their free stuff they were clearly entitled to, so Bethesda figured it was more trouble than it was worth.
However, in this declining economy, all this means is that there will be less quality mods and addons moving forward, and all the people that demand free quality stuff will have to deal with the result of their shortsighted greed.
The odd truth of making money in an amateur fashion in entertainment is that it makes NO SENSE.
Addons makers can spend hundreds or even thousands of hours coding and working to build an amazing add-on, and at best get a few "good job!" comments on their add-on page, followed by thousands of feature requests and angry bug reports. Ask folks to donate money to said add-on maker, and those folks would scoff. But tell them the add-on maker quit supporting the add-on, and their name is mud.
On the other hand, people can play a video game and just record themselves doing it; they will make thousands of dollars.
You see the same thing with mobile game apps. Devs can pour thousands of hours into really intricate and amazing applications, barely see any profit... and then "Yo" app comes along and the guy is set for retirement.
Making add-ons is a generally thankless job. That's just how it is.
man you post a lot...... majority complaint threads lol if someone buys you that silly ice mount would you stop?
Not trying to sound like an A hole, just asking a serious questionSeems (to me) like it is all about money.......
Psychobunni wrote: »Okay, I agree with the OP that addon creators deserve more recognition, especially the ones with massive downloads showing just how game breaking missing elements are for some.
However, I have also seen the OP's complaints about this before (no, I'm not stalking to go find them) and if any criticism or opposite debate is to be taken as "being hated on" well Alien, you are going to stay in a world of hurt that is primarily self imposed.
All I can say is that if you (Alien) feel that you should be monetarily compensated for your contributions to addons, so much as for you to keep at it....and aren't going to receive it. Stop making addons. Don't say "compensation doesn't matter, I do this for fun" in one thread and then make threads like this....and then complain about criticism...
You can't have your cake and eat it too (unless you are rich)
No, add-ons don't have any (direct) means of communication with the out-of-game world.I'm curious if there is the possibility of building ads into a mod. Maybe a popup or a little window in the corner. Make it closeable with a prompt explaining that keeping it open will help provide you with revenue. Maybe even provide a version without ads for 'ethical' reasons.
It has already happened. The malicious add-on was quickly withdrawn, and thanks to the code being transparent, the flawed API was identified and eventually patched by ZOS. Had it been obfuscated, who knows for how long it would spread?AlienDiplomat wrote: »There is no such thing as a "malicious" addon. That is a paranoid myth created by the ill-informed. Addons can only do things that are exposed to the API. It isn't possible to code them to do anything ZOS doesn't let them do.
I don't remember the name. Its original author had quit, and the guy who took it over made it send all your gold to himself.Which addon was this? I've never heard of it.
That's a sure-fire way to discourage people from using your addons at all. Player psychology 101.I'm curious if there is the possibility of building ads into a mod. Maybe a popup or a little window in the corner. Make it closeable with a prompt explaining that keeping it open will help provide you with revenue. Maybe even provide a version without ads for 'ethical' reasons.
This has no relevance to ESO.