Everyone who works for ZOS atm is working on Tamriel Unlimited. They are much too busy to address anything else
Giles.floydub17_ESO wrote: »Those delves are such a small and meaningless part of the game. Merely a skyshard and some XP. I have no issues that they did not complete such an insignificant project as that.
They are now, but they could also be a cool addition to the game world and its lore.
If you've played Skyrim, remember that Dwemer ruin where you found an elevator that brought you to another ruin and a huge underground cave with mushrooms, a giant and a Thu'umable bell which yielded a dragon? With the weird nirnroot? That was a cool adventure, a lot better than the circles many delves still are now.
lordrichter wrote: »Everyone who works for ZOS atm is working on Tamriel Unlimited. They are much too busy to address anything else
Maybe...
"ZOS continues to work on ESO DLC, continuing support and maintenance, as well as unannounced projects."
It is clear from that statement that the "unannounced projects" are not ESO DLC, continuing support, or maintenance. So, what ARE they working on, and how many people are working on it?
lordrichter wrote: »Everyone who works for ZOS atm is working on Tamriel Unlimited. They are much too busy to address anything else
Maybe...
"ZOS continues to work on ESO DLC, continuing support and maintenance, as well as unannounced projects."
It is clear from that statement that the "unannounced projects" are not ESO DLC, continuing support, or maintenance. So, what ARE they working on, and how many people are working on it?
Nobody has an answer, of course. But considering in a recent eso live they actually said they have too few people to even respond to support tickets (as if it weren't obvious), I'd wager nothing too special.
DeadDealer wrote: »so you want small delves like this, ye?
Giles.floydub17_ESO wrote: »Giles.floydub17_ESO wrote: »Those delves are such a small and meaningless part of the game. Merely a skyshard and some XP. I have no issues that they did not complete such an insignificant project as that.
They are now, but they could also be a cool addition to the game world and its lore.
If you've played Skyrim, remember that Dwemer ruin where you found an elevator that brought you to another ruin and a huge underground cave with mushrooms, a giant and a Thu'umable bell which yielded a dragon? With the weird nirnroot? That was a cool adventure, a lot better than the circles many delves still are now.
Comparing the selves to what was in Skyrim is off topic for this thread as that was not the intent when they started updating the public delves.
lordrichter wrote: »lordrichter wrote: »Everyone who works for ZOS atm is working on Tamriel Unlimited. They are much too busy to address anything else
Maybe...
"ZOS continues to work on ESO DLC, continuing support and maintenance, as well as unannounced projects."
It is clear from that statement that the "unannounced projects" are not ESO DLC, continuing support, or maintenance. So, what ARE they working on, and how many people are working on it?
Nobody has an answer, of course. But considering in a recent eso live they actually said they have too few people to even respond to support tickets (as if it weren't obvious), I'd wager nothing too special.
Yeah, but the support people are not working on this sort of stuff.
ZOS is running ESO as a "free to play, store supported" game, for the purpose of this discussion, and they seem to be allocating their support and development expenses with that in mind. They obviously do development at a measured rate that fits into this, and I am sure that the money they spend on support, including support vendors, is in line with all of this.
This does not prevent them from working on other projects using money allocated separately from the live ESO game. Remember that ZOS is division in a much larger company, one that has a lot of cash from games that it can allocate across studios to fund a variety of projects. On top of that, I am fairly certain that ESO is not a financial failure.
DeadDealer wrote: »@Autolycus no lol
they hired 3rd party company to handle tickets, its official info
and then 3rd party company isnt developers at all and they do not working on Tamriel One by any way
Giles.floydub17_ESO wrote: »Giles.floydub17_ESO wrote: »Those delves are such a small and meaningless part of the game. Merely a skyshard and some XP. I have no issues that they did not complete such an insignificant project as that.
They are now, but they could also be a cool addition to the game world and its lore.
If you've played Skyrim, remember that Dwemer ruin where you found an elevator that brought you to another ruin and a huge underground cave with mushrooms, a giant and a Thu'umable bell which yielded a dragon? With the weird nirnroot? That was a cool adventure, a lot better than the circles many delves still are now.
Comparing the selves to what was in Skyrim is off topic for this thread as that was not the intent when they started updating the public delves.
What. BrokeBack
They did not state any intent at all about updating the delves, apart from saying they wanted to make them larger. For what reason? Who knows. I talked about delves in my post and related it to delve size and how it matters for my perception of said delves, pulling an example from another TES game that succesfully implemented large delves that added gameplay value for me, in contrast to other people who'd rather have small delves.
If I started talking about eating chicken soup in the toilet - that would be off topic.
lordrichter wrote: »lordrichter wrote: »Everyone who works for ZOS atm is working on Tamriel Unlimited. They are much too busy to address anything else
Maybe...
"ZOS continues to work on ESO DLC, continuing support and maintenance, as well as unannounced projects."
It is clear from that statement that the "unannounced projects" are not ESO DLC, continuing support, or maintenance. So, what ARE they working on, and how many people are working on it?
Nobody has an answer, of course. But considering in a recent eso live they actually said they have too few people to even respond to support tickets (as if it weren't obvious), I'd wager nothing too special.
Yeah, but the support people are not working on this sort of stuff.
ZOS is running ESO as a "free to play, store supported" game, for the purpose of this discussion, and they seem to be allocating their support and development expenses with that in mind. They obviously do development at a measured rate that fits into this, and I am sure that the money they spend on support, including support vendors, is in line with all of this.
This does not prevent them from working on other projects using money allocated separately from the live ESO game. Remember that ZOS is division in a much larger company, one that has a lot of cash from games that it can allocate across studios to fund a variety of projects. On top of that, I am fairly certain that ESO is not a financial failure.
Don't take my word for it then, go watch the ESO Live streams yourself. Look around the forums... there are threads everywhere about how people aren't getting responses from Support, and I think they said in the stream they've had to close out tickets because they've taken people away to work on One Tamriel instead; that they don't have enough bodies to address everything that's coming their way.
I work in the financial services industry, and analyzing companies is what I do for a living. You're right, ESO (and ZOS, by extension) is not a financial failure, it is a cash cow. But either way, "service" is not the highlight of the business model.