I'd assume the answer is when Microsoft stops being a horrible company and restricting developers from doing things on their platform.
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I'd assume the answer is when Microsoft stops being a horrible company and restricting developers from doing things on their platform.
Funny...usually the sale is always on Xbox one and less often on PS4. Does that mean both Sony and Microsoft are awful circumstancially from one deal to another?
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I'd assume the answer is when Microsoft stops being a horrible company and restricting developers from doing things on their platform.
Funny...usually the sale is always on Xbox one and less often on PS4. Does that mean both Sony and Microsoft are awful circumstancially from one deal to another?
You could say that maybe. Both Sony and MS are in complete control of their own ecosystems and tie up the Dev's hands (usually only temporarily) as they go through cert processes to get content out or change pricing in the Sony or MS stores.
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I'd assume the answer is when Microsoft stops being a horrible company and restricting developers from doing things on their platform.
Funny...usually the sale is always on Xbox one and less often on PS4. Does that mean both Sony and Microsoft are awful circumstancially from one deal to another?
You could say that maybe. Both Sony and MS are in complete control of their own ecosystems and tie up the Dev's hands (usually only temporarily) as they go through cert processes to get content out or change pricing in the Sony or MS stores.
How is that bad?
To me if you're a developer and you want to offer something. Hopefully that's been a plan 6-9 months out.
I honestly can't blame Xbox or Sony if a developer is waiting and not submitting something like a discount months in advance.
Releasing a game is different but I'd also hold a developer responsible koreso than Xbox or Sony because if you want to have something released, submit it 120 days ahead so you know what edits or problems you need to fix
This game literally has some of the worse bugs upon updates so I'm tempted to believe that they are not contacting the console teams early enough in advance. PTS hits and they don't have a firm date yet....for consoles
makeyurself wrote: »It would be nice to get some clarification rather than the silence. I tried asking on Twitter but no response. I want to pick up some crowns but since sales are in the air it would just be nice to know if I should wait a few days or until next week, whatever it is (if anything).
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I'd assume the answer is when Microsoft stops being a horrible company and restricting developers from doing things on their platform.
Funny...usually the sale is always on Xbox one and less often on PS4. Does that mean both Sony and Microsoft are awful circumstancially from one deal to another?
You could say that maybe. Both Sony and MS are in complete control of their own ecosystems and tie up the Dev's hands (usually only temporarily) as they go through cert processes to get content out or change pricing in the Sony or MS stores.
How is that bad?
To me if you're a developer and you want to offer something. Hopefully that's been a plan 6-9 months out.
I honestly can't blame Xbox or Sony if a developer is waiting and not submitting something like a discount months in advance.
Releasing a game is different but I'd also hold a developer responsible koreso than Xbox or Sony because if you want to have something released, submit it 120 days ahead so you know what edits or problems you need to fix
This game literally has some of the worse bugs upon updates so I'm tempted to believe that they are not contacting the console teams early enough in advance. PTS hits and they don't have a firm date yet....for consoles
I don't necessarily think it is bad, it just really depends on an individuals perspective.
However, when it comes to that content specifically, especially with patches and updates, 120 days is tough because they have to submit the final product, not a possible one.
When it comes to the sales it's still up to Sony or MS to flip the switch on the pricing. Hard to say when ZOS notified intent/asked for a sale.
I'm just throwing this information out there for people to know. I'm indifferent really because even though I have ESO on console I don't really play it there.
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I'd assume the answer is when Microsoft stops being a horrible company and restricting developers from doing things on their platform.
Funny...usually the sale is always on Xbox one and less often on PS4. Does that mean both Sony and Microsoft are awful circumstancially from one deal to another?
You could say that maybe. Both Sony and MS are in complete control of their own ecosystems and tie up the Dev's hands (usually only temporarily) as they go through cert processes to get content out or change pricing in the Sony or MS stores.
How is that bad?
To me if you're a developer and you want to offer something. Hopefully that's been a plan 6-9 months out.
I honestly can't blame Xbox or Sony if a developer is waiting and not submitting something like a discount months in advance.
Releasing a game is different but I'd also hold a developer responsible koreso than Xbox or Sony because if you want to have something released, submit it 120 days ahead so you know what edits or problems you need to fix
This game literally has some of the worse bugs upon updates so I'm tempted to believe that they are not contacting the console teams early enough in advance. PTS hits and they don't have a firm date yet....for consoles
I don't necessarily think it is bad, it just really depends on an individuals perspective.
However, when it comes to that content specifically, especially with patches and updates, 120 days is tough because they have to submit the final product, not a possible one.
When it comes to the sales it's still up to Sony or MS to flip the switch on the pricing. Hard to say when ZOS notified intent/asked for a sale.
I'm just throwing this information out there for people to know. I'm indifferent really because even though I have ESO on console I don't really play it there.
But actually no they don't have to submit a final product. @Sigtric
My point is what's submitted is always a buggy mess with sometimes game breaking items.
The console only ensure the game won't break the unit and complies with console specific features....but they release an update and then always have to patch it within 4 weeks so even so it's not a final product.
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I'd assume the answer is when Microsoft stops being a horrible company and restricting developers from doing things on their platform.
Funny...usually the sale is always on Xbox one and less often on PS4. Does that mean both Sony and Microsoft are awful circumstancially from one deal to another?
You could say that maybe. Both Sony and MS are in complete control of their own ecosystems and tie up the Dev's hands (usually only temporarily) as they go through cert processes to get content out or change pricing in the Sony or MS stores.
How is that bad?
To me if you're a developer and you want to offer something. Hopefully that's been a plan 6-9 months out.
I honestly can't blame Xbox or Sony if a developer is waiting and not submitting something like a discount months in advance.
Releasing a game is different but I'd also hold a developer responsible koreso than Xbox or Sony because if you want to have something released, submit it 120 days ahead so you know what edits or problems you need to fix
This game literally has some of the worse bugs upon updates so I'm tempted to believe that they are not contacting the console teams early enough in advance. PTS hits and they don't have a firm date yet....for consoles
I don't necessarily think it is bad, it just really depends on an individuals perspective.
However, when it comes to that content specifically, especially with patches and updates, 120 days is tough because they have to submit the final product, not a possible one.
When it comes to the sales it's still up to Sony or MS to flip the switch on the pricing. Hard to say when ZOS notified intent/asked for a sale.
I'm just throwing this information out there for people to know. I'm indifferent really because even though I have ESO on console I don't really play it there.
But actually no they don't have to submit a final product. @Sigtric
My point is what's submitted is always a buggy mess with sometimes game breaking items.
The console only ensure the game won't break the unit and complies with console specific features....but they release an update and then always have to patch it within 4 weeks so even so it's not a final product.
It has to be the final for that release. Yep bugs will still get in but the patch that is submitted is the one that is pushed unless it doesn't get certified. At least this is the way it was explained by a different dev house to me when we were speaking about their release to console. Final product was a poor choice in terminology on my part.
To get back on topic though, the matter at hand here is there is a very good chance that MS is the one holding up the beginning of the sale. Communication from ZOS would be nice for the folks waiting though, even if it is just to say it's being worked on/no specific information yet.