Same book, different chapter.
Can ZoS just put all the Hate threads into one special forum for these people
That way they can just hate the world and tell each other.
@MoTeets
There isn't even a trace of hate in my posts, you came in here with that supposition all on your own. It's a simple, completely unemotional matter of ESO+ losing some of its advertised value. They advertised access to all DLC and they advertised a release schedule of quarterly DLC. Since they are no longer going to meet those advertised subscription benefits, it is not unreasonable to say that more things should be added to ESO+ to keep it more in line with its original advertised value. They already did this once by adding the Crafting Bag, which you could say makes up for the loss of a DLC in Q4 2016. That's all there is to it! No big deal, no hate, just some simple economics.
Hiero_Glyph wrote: »Hiero_Glyph wrote: »We are not getting a DLC zone this year
Baseless conjecture.
The features sound nice. But we're only a month into the year. Let's not say the sky is falling just yet.
It will be a year since the last DLC in August. We may only be a month into 2017 but that doesn't excuse the lack of DLC for the previous 4 months.
I'm confused. Are you expecting a new zone DLC EVERY month?!? Yikes. Is it any wonder there are so many other issues with ESO since everybody needs to be scrambling to figure out where to put zones and what content to put in to it to satisfy!
The entitlement is strong in this one.
ZOS promised 4 DLCs per year after IC. They made this statement, not me. Is it entitlement to hold someone to their word?
I downloaded One Tamriel, isn't that a DLC? Or did it come out back in August? That seems like a long time ago.
@DenMoriaSame book, different chapter.
Can ZoS just put all the Hate threads into one special forum for these people
That way they can just hate the world and tell each other.
@MoTeets
There isn't even a trace of hate in my posts, you came in here with that supposition all on your own. It's a simple, completely unemotional matter of ESO+ losing some of its advertised value. They advertised access to all DLC and they advertised a release schedule of quarterly DLC. Since they are no longer going to meet those advertised subscription benefits, it is not unreasonable to say that more things should be added to ESO+ to keep it more in line with its original advertised value. They already did this once by adding the Crafting Bag, which you could say makes up for the loss of a DLC in Q4 2016. That's all there is to it! No big deal, no hate, just some simple economics.
But. Is the crafting bag really worth $15 a month?
Chilly-McFreeze wrote: »@Recremen
Uff, I much rather pay 14€ and take the 1500 crowns plus the other subscription perks than to use the same amount of real life money to buy just the crowns.But whatever floats your goat.
DaveMoeDee wrote: »Chilly-McFreeze wrote: »@Recremen
Uff, I much rather pay 14€ and take the 1500 crowns plus the other subscription perks than to use the same amount of real life money to buy just the crowns.But whatever floats your goat.
I would rather get 5500 crowns for $24, which is what a lot of us do.
What kind of idiot would replace a sub, where they pay $180 a year, with a bunch of $15 crown purchases at the worst possible rate?
If you want to make an argument, make it at least acknowledge the real alternatives out there.
ESO+ benefits have only expanded over the last year and a half. They change their update schedules and start doing chapters (a matter of semantics, really), and you start asking for compensation?
By all means, but the more systems they lock behind ESO+, the more they're going to affront people who came here on the premise of it being B2P. We have seen that several times over. I don't think that is the way to go. Better give out a larger stipend of Crowns or subscriber loyalty rewards like pets/mounts/costumes, if anything at all.
Edit: the irony between this thread and threads calling ZOS 'greedy'. Hehe.
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
Because they cannot know the value of a sub because they don't know ZOS plans.
What is the value of a sub to a player? A major part is access to DLC. How much is access to DLC worth? Access to DLC is worth the cost of buying with crowns. How do I determine if subbing next month is worth it if I don't know when the next DLC will come out? I can't determine that. It is easy to say "just cancel the sub", but then they lose access to the DLC and need to spend additional resources to get access to the DLC. Imagine someone unsubbed before the Morrowind announcement and bought all the old DLC. Then, a different announcement was made the the content would be $40 and INCLUDED in sub. If they sub again, they essentially wasted the resources they spend on all the old DLC they want to retain access to.
If they instead continued to sub to retain access to old DLC while waiting for new, they would have been met with the announcement we got IRL where the new DLC is not DLC and not included. Now, when they cancel the sub to not pay for the next 5+ months to just access the same old DLC, they need to spend to buy DLC and have also wasted resources subbing for the time since Hist when no new content was released. They could have saved $15 a month, bought a few 5500 crowns for $24 packs, and bought the DLC a long time ago.
My point is that people cannot accurately determine the value of the sub when ZOS keeps next quarter's plans secret, when they don't meet expectations (like the quarterly DLC plan that only lasted 5 months), and when they change their model on a whim. And managing a sub is not as simple as sub-unsub.
So now that the content schedule has been altered, I feel ESO+ benefits need to be reexamined.
...
These of course are just a start, but right now it really does not appear that we are getting the advertised benefits on an appropriate schedule.
What I find more than a little frightening is that someone actually said: "ESO+ members who were banking on the promised DLC schedule to get the true value out of their subscriptions."
Honestly, I've been an ESO+ member since the beginning and never once has that thought even crossed my mind.
DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
Because they cannot know the value of a sub because they don't know ZOS plans.
What is the value of a sub to a player? A major part is access to DLC. How much is access to DLC worth? Access to DLC is worth the cost of buying with crowns. How do I determine if subbing next month is worth it if I don't know when the next DLC will come out? I can't determine that. It is easy to say "just cancel the sub", but then they lose access to the DLC and need to spend additional resources to get access to the DLC. Imagine someone unsubbed before the Morrowind announcement and bought all the old DLC. Then, a different announcement was made the the content would be $40 and INCLUDED in sub. If they sub again, they essentially wasted the resources they spend on all the old DLC they want to retain access to.
If they instead continued to sub to retain access to old DLC while waiting for new, they would have been met with the announcement we got IRL where the new DLC is not DLC and not included. Now, when they cancel the sub to not pay for the next 5+ months to just access the same old DLC, they need to spend to buy DLC and have also wasted resources subbing for the time since Hist when no new content was released. They could have saved $15 a month, bought a few 5500 crowns for $24 packs, and bought the DLC a long time ago.
My point is that people cannot accurately determine the value of the sub when ZOS keeps next quarter's plans secret, when they don't meet expectations (like the quarterly DLC plan that only lasted 5 months), and when they change their model on a whim. And managing a sub is not as simple as sub-unsub.
Chilly-McFreeze wrote: »@Recremen
Uff, I much rather pay 14€ and take the 1500 crowns plus the other subscription perks than to use the same amount of real life money to buy just the crowns.But whatever floats your goat.
Same book, different chapter.
Can ZoS just put all the Hate threads into one special forum for these people
That way they can just hate the world and tell each other.
@MoTeets
There isn't even a trace of hate in my posts, you came in here with that supposition all on your own. It's a simple, completely unemotional matter of ESO+ losing some of its advertised value. They advertised access to all DLC and they advertised a release schedule of quarterly DLC. Since they are no longer going to meet those advertised subscription benefits, it is not unreasonable to say that more things should be added to ESO+ to keep it more in line with its original advertised value. They already did this once by adding the Crafting Bag, which you could say makes up for the loss of a DLC in Q4 2016. That's all there is to it! No big deal, no hate, just some simple economics.
But. Is the crafting bag really worth $15 a month?
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
Because they cannot know the value of a sub because they don't know ZOS plans.
What is the value of a sub to a player? A major part is access to DLC. How much is access to DLC worth? Access to DLC is worth the cost of buying with crowns. How do I determine if subbing next month is worth it if I don't know when the next DLC will come out? I can't determine that. It is easy to say "just cancel the sub", but then they lose access to the DLC and need to spend additional resources to get access to the DLC. Imagine someone unsubbed before the Morrowind announcement and bought all the old DLC. Then, a different announcement was made the the content would be $40 and INCLUDED in sub. If they sub again, they essentially wasted the resources they spend on all the old DLC they want to retain access to.
If they instead continued to sub to retain access to old DLC while waiting for new, they would have been met with the announcement we got IRL where the new DLC is not DLC and not included. Now, when they cancel the sub to not pay for the next 5+ months to just access the same old DLC, they need to spend to buy DLC and have also wasted resources subbing for the time since Hist when no new content was released. They could have saved $15 a month, bought a few 5500 crowns for $24 packs, and bought the DLC a long time ago.
My point is that people cannot accurately determine the value of the sub when ZOS keeps next quarter's plans secret, when they don't meet expectations (like the quarterly DLC plan that only lasted 5 months), and when they change their model on a whim. And managing a sub is not as simple as sub-unsub.
@DaveMoeDee
The value is simple. From that day they sign up and 30-90 days in the future....Do you want to spend X for the listed benefits?
It's a yes or No
If it's not yes....don't buy
It's literally that simple. If you or anyone is subscribing for anything other than current benefits as in, something you gain as soon as you pay, I'd suggest that you not pay and wait
Same book, different chapter.
Can ZoS just put all the Hate threads into one special forum for these people
That way they can just hate the world and tell each other.
@MoTeets
There isn't even a trace of hate in my posts, you came in here with that supposition all on your own. It's a simple, completely unemotional matter of ESO+ losing some of its advertised value. They advertised access to all DLC and they advertised a release schedule of quarterly DLC. Since they are no longer going to meet those advertised subscription benefits, it is not unreasonable to say that more things should be added to ESO+ to keep it more in line with its original advertised value. They already did this once by adding the Crafting Bag, which you could say makes up for the loss of a DLC in Q4 2016. That's all there is to it! No big deal, no hate, just some simple economics.
But. Is the crafting bag really worth $15 a month?
keep in mind that they get crowns for subscribing, so if they are gonna spend 180usd in the game anyway, then yes, by all means the bag is worth it for crafters.
Hiero_Glyph wrote: »Hiero_Glyph wrote: »We are not getting a DLC zone this year
Baseless conjecture.
The features sound nice. But we're only a month into the year. Let's not say the sky is falling just yet.
It will be a year since the last DLC in August. We may only be a month into 2017 but that doesn't excuse the lack of DLC for the previous 4 months.
I'm confused. Are you expecting a new zone DLC EVERY month?!? Yikes. Is it any wonder there are so many other issues with ESO since everybody needs to be scrambling to figure out where to put zones and what content to put in to it to satisfy!
The entitlement is strong in this one.
ZOS promised 4 DLCs per year after IC. They made this statement, not me. Is it entitlement to hold someone to their word?
Didn't we get 4 DLC's last year? I seem to remember that we did:
Imperial City
Orsinium
Dark Brotherhood
Thieves Guild
I think there may have been more, but I haven't really been paying close attention.
And didn't we also get One Tamriel along with any number of smaller items and crown store items as well? And didn't they just announce Morrowind?
How much more do you want?
DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
Because they cannot know the value of a sub because they don't know ZOS plans.
What is the value of a sub to a player? A major part is access to DLC. How much is access to DLC worth? Access to DLC is worth the cost of buying with crowns. How do I determine if subbing next month is worth it if I don't know when the next DLC will come out? I can't determine that. It is easy to say "just cancel the sub", but then they lose access to the DLC and need to spend additional resources to get access to the DLC. Imagine someone unsubbed before the Morrowind announcement and bought all the old DLC. Then, a different announcement was made the the content would be $40 and INCLUDED in sub. If they sub again, they essentially wasted the resources they spend on all the old DLC they want to retain access to.
If they instead continued to sub to retain access to old DLC while waiting for new, they would have been met with the announcement we got IRL where the new DLC is not DLC and not included. Now, when they cancel the sub to not pay for the next 5+ months to just access the same old DLC, they need to spend to buy DLC and have also wasted resources subbing for the time since Hist when no new content was released. They could have saved $15 a month, bought a few 5500 crowns for $24 packs, and bought the DLC a long time ago.
My point is that people cannot accurately determine the value of the sub when ZOS keeps next quarter's plans secret, when they don't meet expectations (like the quarterly DLC plan that only lasted 5 months), and when they change their model on a whim. And managing a sub is not as simple as sub-unsub.
@DaveMoeDee
The value is simple. From that day they sign up and 30-90 days in the future....Do you want to spend X for the listed benefits?
It's a yes or No
If it's not yes....don't buy
It's literally that simple. If you or anyone is subscribing for anything other than current benefits as in, something you gain as soon as you pay, I'd suggest that you not pay and wait
No, it is not literally that simple. Reread my post. It is explained there.
The flaw in your reasoning is that people don't stop playing the game when they end their sub. This is a question of total cost over your complete time in game. How much you spend on the game will be the sum of buying the game/chapters, buying crowns, and paying for subs. How much will it cost me to have access to all DLC from now through the end of the year? With a sub, it will cost $165 (a little less if buying 6 months at a time). What will it cost if I buy DLC? We have no idea because we don't know how much DLC will cost. How much will access to all DLC be next year? $180 through sub. We have no idea if we buy outright because we don't even know if they will actually deliver 3 DLC and we don't know how much they will cost.
If after the DB DLC we tried to predict the future to see how much access to DLC would be worth, we might estimate around 2500 crowns/quarter because we had 4 consecutive DLC and the average was around there. With all of the crown sales, that ends up a little over $10/quarter or $4/month. But if we consider the 1500 crowns with the sub and the crafting bag (and even the small perks), the sub could feel worth it. It felt even more worth it when the first DLC dropped because we had not yet seen sales on crowns and 5500 crowns for $40 was the best deal, closer to $7/month for DLC.
Someone trying to decide whether to maintain their access to DLC through outright purchase or a sub would need to consider the expected cost per month. The problem is that when you stop adding new DLC, you are now just paying to maintain access to old DLC. ZOS knows what it will try to deliver. We don't until they announce it. If I sub 12 month for $90 worth of DLC, DLC is contributing $5/month to the value I am getting from my sub. If the next year they release no DLC, over two years I received the same $90 worth of DLC for $360. That means DLC ends up contributing only $2.50 to the value of the sub.
That is why players can't properly evaluate the value the sub adds to the game without knowing future releases.
If you make financial decisions without anticipating the future, you are going to leave a lot of money on the table.
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
Because they cannot know the value of a sub because they don't know ZOS plans.
What is the value of a sub to a player? A major part is access to DLC. How much is access to DLC worth? Access to DLC is worth the cost of buying with crowns. How do I determine if subbing next month is worth it if I don't know when the next DLC will come out? I can't determine that. It is easy to say "just cancel the sub", but then they lose access to the DLC and need to spend additional resources to get access to the DLC. Imagine someone unsubbed before the Morrowind announcement and bought all the old DLC. Then, a different announcement was made the the content would be $40 and INCLUDED in sub. If they sub again, they essentially wasted the resources they spend on all the old DLC they want to retain access to.
If they instead continued to sub to retain access to old DLC while waiting for new, they would have been met with the announcement we got IRL where the new DLC is not DLC and not included. Now, when they cancel the sub to not pay for the next 5+ months to just access the same old DLC, they need to spend to buy DLC and have also wasted resources subbing for the time since Hist when no new content was released. They could have saved $15 a month, bought a few 5500 crowns for $24 packs, and bought the DLC a long time ago.
My point is that people cannot accurately determine the value of the sub when ZOS keeps next quarter's plans secret, when they don't meet expectations (like the quarterly DLC plan that only lasted 5 months), and when they change their model on a whim. And managing a sub is not as simple as sub-unsub.
@DaveMoeDee
The value is simple. From that day they sign up and 30-90 days in the future....Do you want to spend X for the listed benefits?
It's a yes or No
If it's not yes....don't buy
It's literally that simple. If you or anyone is subscribing for anything other than current benefits as in, something you gain as soon as you pay, I'd suggest that you not pay and wait
No, it is not literally that simple. Reread my post. It is explained there.
The flaw in your reasoning is that people don't stop playing the game when they end their sub. This is a question of total cost over your complete time in game. How much you spend on the game will be the sum of buying the game/chapters, buying crowns, and paying for subs. How much will it cost me to have access to all DLC from now through the end of the year? With a sub, it will cost $165 (a little less if buying 6 months at a time). What will it cost if I buy DLC? We have no idea because we don't know how much DLC will cost. How much will access to all DLC be next year? $180 through sub. We have no idea if we buy outright because we don't even know if they will actually deliver 3 DLC and we don't know how much they will cost.
If after the DB DLC we tried to predict the future to see how much access to DLC would be worth, we might estimate around 2500 crowns/quarter because we had 4 consecutive DLC and the average was around there. With all of the crown sales, that ends up a little over $10/quarter or $4/month. But if we consider the 1500 crowns with the sub and the crafting bag (and even the small perks), the sub could feel worth it. It felt even more worth it when the first DLC dropped because we had not yet seen sales on crowns and 5500 crowns for $40 was the best deal, closer to $7/month for DLC.
Someone trying to decide whether to maintain their access to DLC through outright purchase or a sub would need to consider the expected cost per month. The problem is that when you stop adding new DLC, you are now just paying to maintain access to old DLC. ZOS knows what it will try to deliver. We don't until they announce it. If I sub 12 month for $90 worth of DLC, DLC is contributing $5/month to the value I am getting from my sub. If the next year they release no DLC, over two years I received the same $90 worth of DLC for $360. That means DLC ends up contributing only $2.50 to the value of the sub.
That is why players can't properly evaluate the value the sub adds to the game without knowing future releases.
If you make financial decisions without anticipating the future, you are going to leave a lot of money on the table.
@DaveMoeDee
It actually is that simple. I've been doing it since 2014. There was a time where I lost access to everything and later it was only dlc I didn't buy with the crowns provided from the ESO plus sub.
The financial decision is 30, 60 or 90 days in most cases based on the sub chosen.
The decision is do I buy 30, 60 or 90 days worth.
You aren't talking about the subscription tho, you're talking about what you can afford or what you are willing to pay and that is a personal decision.
Options are
-spend money
-don't spend money
It's simple.
You're saying it's complicated and the decision for you to spend money is based on what you get immediately and what you're going to get in the unforeseen future.
You are complicating your decision because you're trying to decide on something without information.
That's you're choice and each of us has that opportunity however it seems your choice is trying to get as much as you can out of what you spend vs getting what you want out of what you spend.
See the difference?
DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
Because they cannot know the value of a sub because they don't know ZOS plans.
What is the value of a sub to a player? A major part is access to DLC. How much is access to DLC worth? Access to DLC is worth the cost of buying with crowns. How do I determine if subbing next month is worth it if I don't know when the next DLC will come out? I can't determine that. It is easy to say "just cancel the sub", but then they lose access to the DLC and need to spend additional resources to get access to the DLC. Imagine someone unsubbed before the Morrowind announcement and bought all the old DLC. Then, a different announcement was made the the content would be $40 and INCLUDED in sub. If they sub again, they essentially wasted the resources they spend on all the old DLC they want to retain access to.
If they instead continued to sub to retain access to old DLC while waiting for new, they would have been met with the announcement we got IRL where the new DLC is not DLC and not included. Now, when they cancel the sub to not pay for the next 5+ months to just access the same old DLC, they need to spend to buy DLC and have also wasted resources subbing for the time since Hist when no new content was released. They could have saved $15 a month, bought a few 5500 crowns for $24 packs, and bought the DLC a long time ago.
My point is that people cannot accurately determine the value of the sub when ZOS keeps next quarter's plans secret, when they don't meet expectations (like the quarterly DLC plan that only lasted 5 months), and when they change their model on a whim. And managing a sub is not as simple as sub-unsub.
@DaveMoeDee
The value is simple. From that day they sign up and 30-90 days in the future....Do you want to spend X for the listed benefits?
It's a yes or No
If it's not yes....don't buy
It's literally that simple. If you or anyone is subscribing for anything other than current benefits as in, something you gain as soon as you pay, I'd suggest that you not pay and wait
No, it is not literally that simple. Reread my post. It is explained there.
The flaw in your reasoning is that people don't stop playing the game when they end their sub. This is a question of total cost over your complete time in game. How much you spend on the game will be the sum of buying the game/chapters, buying crowns, and paying for subs. How much will it cost me to have access to all DLC from now through the end of the year? With a sub, it will cost $165 (a little less if buying 6 months at a time). What will it cost if I buy DLC? We have no idea because we don't know how much DLC will cost. How much will access to all DLC be next year? $180 through sub. We have no idea if we buy outright because we don't even know if they will actually deliver 3 DLC and we don't know how much they will cost.
If after the DB DLC we tried to predict the future to see how much access to DLC would be worth, we might estimate around 2500 crowns/quarter because we had 4 consecutive DLC and the average was around there. With all of the crown sales, that ends up a little over $10/quarter or $4/month. But if we consider the 1500 crowns with the sub and the crafting bag (and even the small perks), the sub could feel worth it. It felt even more worth it when the first DLC dropped because we had not yet seen sales on crowns and 5500 crowns for $40 was the best deal, closer to $7/month for DLC.
Someone trying to decide whether to maintain their access to DLC through outright purchase or a sub would need to consider the expected cost per month. The problem is that when you stop adding new DLC, you are now just paying to maintain access to old DLC. ZOS knows what it will try to deliver. We don't until they announce it. If I sub 12 month for $90 worth of DLC, DLC is contributing $5/month to the value I am getting from my sub. If the next year they release no DLC, over two years I received the same $90 worth of DLC for $360. That means DLC ends up contributing only $2.50 to the value of the sub.
That is why players can't properly evaluate the value the sub adds to the game without knowing future releases.
If you make financial decisions without anticipating the future, you are going to leave a lot of money on the table.
@DaveMoeDee
It actually is that simple. I've been doing it since 2014. There was a time where I lost access to everything and later it was only dlc I didn't buy with the crowns provided from the ESO plus sub.
The financial decision is 30, 60 or 90 days in most cases based on the sub chosen.
The decision is do I buy 30, 60 or 90 days worth.
You aren't talking about the subscription tho, you're talking about what you can afford or what you are willing to pay and that is a personal decision.
Options are
-spend money
-don't spend money
It's simple.
You're saying it's complicated and the decision for you to spend money is based on what you get immediately and what you're going to get in the unforeseen future.
You are complicating your decision because you're trying to decide on something without information.
That's you're choice and each of us has that opportunity however it seems your choice is trying to get as much as you can out of what you spend vs getting what you want out of what you spend.
See the difference?
No. I am not talking about what I can afford. If you see two cars and you can afford them both, which do you choose? That is what I am talking about. In fact, nowhere do I mention anything about what people can afford. Why are you mentioning something irrelevant and attributing it to me? Are you just not able to follow because it is a wall of text? If I shorten it, there will be gaps in the explanation.
The decision when you buy anything is part of your overall finances. I lay this all out above. I would be able to accept you disagreement if you displayed that you understood what I said. That clearly is not the case based on your comment about what I can afford.
"Options are -spend money -don't spend money" is silly. You spend money both ways, sub or direct DLC purchase. Don't be obtuse. For people who plan to have all the DLC, the option is not usually sub/don't sub. The option is sub/buy with crowns.
I would agree with the idea that it has long been clear that the value from DLC was decreasing and people should have considered that more honestly, if you were actually making that point.
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
Because they cannot know the value of a sub because they don't know ZOS plans.
What is the value of a sub to a player? A major part is access to DLC. How much is access to DLC worth? Access to DLC is worth the cost of buying with crowns. How do I determine if subbing next month is worth it if I don't know when the next DLC will come out? I can't determine that. It is easy to say "just cancel the sub", but then they lose access to the DLC and need to spend additional resources to get access to the DLC. Imagine someone unsubbed before the Morrowind announcement and bought all the old DLC. Then, a different announcement was made the the content would be $40 and INCLUDED in sub. If they sub again, they essentially wasted the resources they spend on all the old DLC they want to retain access to.
If they instead continued to sub to retain access to old DLC while waiting for new, they would have been met with the announcement we got IRL where the new DLC is not DLC and not included. Now, when they cancel the sub to not pay for the next 5+ months to just access the same old DLC, they need to spend to buy DLC and have also wasted resources subbing for the time since Hist when no new content was released. They could have saved $15 a month, bought a few 5500 crowns for $24 packs, and bought the DLC a long time ago.
My point is that people cannot accurately determine the value of the sub when ZOS keeps next quarter's plans secret, when they don't meet expectations (like the quarterly DLC plan that only lasted 5 months), and when they change their model on a whim. And managing a sub is not as simple as sub-unsub.
@DaveMoeDee
The value is simple. From that day they sign up and 30-90 days in the future....Do you want to spend X for the listed benefits?
It's a yes or No
If it's not yes....don't buy
It's literally that simple. If you or anyone is subscribing for anything other than current benefits as in, something you gain as soon as you pay, I'd suggest that you not pay and wait
No, it is not literally that simple. Reread my post. It is explained there.
The flaw in your reasoning is that people don't stop playing the game when they end their sub. This is a question of total cost over your complete time in game. How much you spend on the game will be the sum of buying the game/chapters, buying crowns, and paying for subs. How much will it cost me to have access to all DLC from now through the end of the year? With a sub, it will cost $165 (a little less if buying 6 months at a time). What will it cost if I buy DLC? We have no idea because we don't know how much DLC will cost. How much will access to all DLC be next year? $180 through sub. We have no idea if we buy outright because we don't even know if they will actually deliver 3 DLC and we don't know how much they will cost.
If after the DB DLC we tried to predict the future to see how much access to DLC would be worth, we might estimate around 2500 crowns/quarter because we had 4 consecutive DLC and the average was around there. With all of the crown sales, that ends up a little over $10/quarter or $4/month. But if we consider the 1500 crowns with the sub and the crafting bag (and even the small perks), the sub could feel worth it. It felt even more worth it when the first DLC dropped because we had not yet seen sales on crowns and 5500 crowns for $40 was the best deal, closer to $7/month for DLC.
Someone trying to decide whether to maintain their access to DLC through outright purchase or a sub would need to consider the expected cost per month. The problem is that when you stop adding new DLC, you are now just paying to maintain access to old DLC. ZOS knows what it will try to deliver. We don't until they announce it. If I sub 12 month for $90 worth of DLC, DLC is contributing $5/month to the value I am getting from my sub. If the next year they release no DLC, over two years I received the same $90 worth of DLC for $360. That means DLC ends up contributing only $2.50 to the value of the sub.
That is why players can't properly evaluate the value the sub adds to the game without knowing future releases.
If you make financial decisions without anticipating the future, you are going to leave a lot of money on the table.
@DaveMoeDee
It actually is that simple. I've been doing it since 2014. There was a time where I lost access to everything and later it was only dlc I didn't buy with the crowns provided from the ESO plus sub.
The financial decision is 30, 60 or 90 days in most cases based on the sub chosen.
The decision is do I buy 30, 60 or 90 days worth.
You aren't talking about the subscription tho, you're talking about what you can afford or what you are willing to pay and that is a personal decision.
Options are
-spend money
-don't spend money
It's simple.
You're saying it's complicated and the decision for you to spend money is based on what you get immediately and what you're going to get in the unforeseen future.
You are complicating your decision because you're trying to decide on something without information.
That's you're choice and each of us has that opportunity however it seems your choice is trying to get as much as you can out of what you spend vs getting what you want out of what you spend.
See the difference?
No. I am not talking about what I can afford. If you see two cars and you can afford them both, which do you choose? That is what I am talking about. In fact, nowhere do I mention anything about what people can afford. Why are you mentioning something irrelevant and attributing it to me? Are you just not able to follow because it is a wall of text? If I shorten it, there will be gaps in the explanation.
The decision when you buy anything is part of your overall finances. I lay this all out above. I would be able to accept you disagreement if you displayed that you understood what I said. That clearly is not the case based on your comment about what I can afford.
"Options are -spend money -don't spend money" is silly. You spend money both ways, sub or direct DLC purchase. Don't be obtuse. For people who plan to have all the DLC, the option is not usually sub/don't sub. The option is sub/buy with crowns.
I would agree with the idea that it has long been clear that the value from DLC was decreasing and people should have considered that more honestly, if you were actually making that point.
@DaveMoeDee
Please don't let my comments upset you.
I really just see it that simple.
In your example of looking at two cars, let's use that. Is a good context.
I see that as a very simple decision.
I have the finances for both but will choose one or the other (for me) because I don't see value in buying two cars and only being able to drive one at a time. The decision is simple
The game has DLC, crowns and expansions (three choices).
I have the money to buy all three every time they come up, however, (for me) the choice is very simple.
I'm only buying one of the three because all three always give me access to something. What I want to do determines which I buy. (That is very simple)
Actual Example:
Right now I'm working on completing Craglorn again and finishing up make guild books. Because I'm in Craglorn I purchased a sub because while doing those quests, that environment has nirncrux which I see as valuable to me.
Actual example2:
In November - December I was off from work for three weeks on vacation. From memory there was a crown sale and a event. I did not buy a sub and instead purchased a crown pack b cause I decided to make a new alt but knew that some time in the future I would problably spend crowns on something so I picked up $50 worth (11,000)
Actual example 3:
September - October:
I wasn't playing much due to my partyime job so I let me subscription stop and didn't buy crown either
All of those are very simple and none require knowledge of what's coming in the future. These decisions are based on 30,60 or 90 days because that's is how ZOS lays out their updates and content.
DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
Because they cannot know the value of a sub because they don't know ZOS plans.
What is the value of a sub to a player? A major part is access to DLC. How much is access to DLC worth? Access to DLC is worth the cost of buying with crowns. How do I determine if subbing next month is worth it if I don't know when the next DLC will come out? I can't determine that. It is easy to say "just cancel the sub", but then they lose access to the DLC and need to spend additional resources to get access to the DLC. Imagine someone unsubbed before the Morrowind announcement and bought all the old DLC. Then, a different announcement was made the the content would be $40 and INCLUDED in sub. If they sub again, they essentially wasted the resources they spend on all the old DLC they want to retain access to.
If they instead continued to sub to retain access to old DLC while waiting for new, they would have been met with the announcement we got IRL where the new DLC is not DLC and not included. Now, when they cancel the sub to not pay for the next 5+ months to just access the same old DLC, they need to spend to buy DLC and have also wasted resources subbing for the time since Hist when no new content was released. They could have saved $15 a month, bought a few 5500 crowns for $24 packs, and bought the DLC a long time ago.
My point is that people cannot accurately determine the value of the sub when ZOS keeps next quarter's plans secret, when they don't meet expectations (like the quarterly DLC plan that only lasted 5 months), and when they change their model on a whim. And managing a sub is not as simple as sub-unsub.
@DaveMoeDee
The value is simple. From that day they sign up and 30-90 days in the future....Do you want to spend X for the listed benefits?
It's a yes or No
If it's not yes....don't buy
It's literally that simple. If you or anyone is subscribing for anything other than current benefits as in, something you gain as soon as you pay, I'd suggest that you not pay and wait
No, it is not literally that simple. Reread my post. It is explained there.
The flaw in your reasoning is that people don't stop playing the game when they end their sub. This is a question of total cost over your complete time in game. How much you spend on the game will be the sum of buying the game/chapters, buying crowns, and paying for subs. How much will it cost me to have access to all DLC from now through the end of the year? With a sub, it will cost $165 (a little less if buying 6 months at a time). What will it cost if I buy DLC? We have no idea because we don't know how much DLC will cost. How much will access to all DLC be next year? $180 through sub. We have no idea if we buy outright because we don't even know if they will actually deliver 3 DLC and we don't know how much they will cost.
If after the DB DLC we tried to predict the future to see how much access to DLC would be worth, we might estimate around 2500 crowns/quarter because we had 4 consecutive DLC and the average was around there. With all of the crown sales, that ends up a little over $10/quarter or $4/month. But if we consider the 1500 crowns with the sub and the crafting bag (and even the small perks), the sub could feel worth it. It felt even more worth it when the first DLC dropped because we had not yet seen sales on crowns and 5500 crowns for $40 was the best deal, closer to $7/month for DLC.
Someone trying to decide whether to maintain their access to DLC through outright purchase or a sub would need to consider the expected cost per month. The problem is that when you stop adding new DLC, you are now just paying to maintain access to old DLC. ZOS knows what it will try to deliver. We don't until they announce it. If I sub 12 month for $90 worth of DLC, DLC is contributing $5/month to the value I am getting from my sub. If the next year they release no DLC, over two years I received the same $90 worth of DLC for $360. That means DLC ends up contributing only $2.50 to the value of the sub.
That is why players can't properly evaluate the value the sub adds to the game without knowing future releases.
If you make financial decisions without anticipating the future, you are going to leave a lot of money on the table.
@DaveMoeDee
It actually is that simple. I've been doing it since 2014. There was a time where I lost access to everything and later it was only dlc I didn't buy with the crowns provided from the ESO plus sub.
The financial decision is 30, 60 or 90 days in most cases based on the sub chosen.
The decision is do I buy 30, 60 or 90 days worth.
You aren't talking about the subscription tho, you're talking about what you can afford or what you are willing to pay and that is a personal decision.
Options are
-spend money
-don't spend money
It's simple.
You're saying it's complicated and the decision for you to spend money is based on what you get immediately and what you're going to get in the unforeseen future.
You are complicating your decision because you're trying to decide on something without information.
That's you're choice and each of us has that opportunity however it seems your choice is trying to get as much as you can out of what you spend vs getting what you want out of what you spend.
See the difference?
No. I am not talking about what I can afford. If you see two cars and you can afford them both, which do you choose? That is what I am talking about. In fact, nowhere do I mention anything about what people can afford. Why are you mentioning something irrelevant and attributing it to me? Are you just not able to follow because it is a wall of text? If I shorten it, there will be gaps in the explanation.
The decision when you buy anything is part of your overall finances. I lay this all out above. I would be able to accept you disagreement if you displayed that you understood what I said. That clearly is not the case based on your comment about what I can afford.
"Options are -spend money -don't spend money" is silly. You spend money both ways, sub or direct DLC purchase. Don't be obtuse. For people who plan to have all the DLC, the option is not usually sub/don't sub. The option is sub/buy with crowns.
I would agree with the idea that it has long been clear that the value from DLC was decreasing and people should have considered that more honestly, if you were actually making that point.
@DaveMoeDee
Please don't let my comments upset you.
I really just see it that simple.
In your example of looking at two cars, let's use that. Is a good context.
I see that as a very simple decision.
I have the finances for both but will choose one or the other (for me) because I don't see value in buying two cars and only being able to drive one at a time. The decision is simple
The game has DLC, crowns and expansions (three choices).
I have the money to buy all three every time they come up, however, (for me) the choice is very simple.
I'm only buying one of the three because all three always give me access to something. What I want to do determines which I buy. (That is very simple)
Actual Example:
Right now I'm working on completing Craglorn again and finishing up make guild books. Because I'm in Craglorn I purchased a sub because while doing those quests, that environment has nirncrux which I see as valuable to me.
Actual example2:
In November - December I was off from work for three weeks on vacation. From memory there was a crown sale and a event. I did not buy a sub and instead purchased a crown pack b cause I decided to make a new alt but knew that some time in the future I would problably spend crowns on something so I picked up $50 worth (11,000)
Actual example 3:
September - October:
I wasn't playing much due to my partyime job so I let me subscription stop and didn't buy crown either
All of those are very simple and none require knowledge of what's coming in the future. These decisions are based on 30,60 or 90 days because that's is how ZOS lays out their updates and content.
It doesn't matter if you think your examples don't require knowledge of the future. I gave a clear account of how people need to make assumptions about the future to decide about the sub. Your examples would be like me seeing a hat and saying this is not a duck, seeing a car and saying this is not a duck, seeing a show and saying this is not a duck, and then concluding "there are not ducks". Counter examples aren't a real response.
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
Because they cannot know the value of a sub because they don't know ZOS plans.
What is the value of a sub to a player? A major part is access to DLC. How much is access to DLC worth? Access to DLC is worth the cost of buying with crowns. How do I determine if subbing next month is worth it if I don't know when the next DLC will come out? I can't determine that. It is easy to say "just cancel the sub", but then they lose access to the DLC and need to spend additional resources to get access to the DLC. Imagine someone unsubbed before the Morrowind announcement and bought all the old DLC. Then, a different announcement was made the the content would be $40 and INCLUDED in sub. If they sub again, they essentially wasted the resources they spend on all the old DLC they want to retain access to.
If they instead continued to sub to retain access to old DLC while waiting for new, they would have been met with the announcement we got IRL where the new DLC is not DLC and not included. Now, when they cancel the sub to not pay for the next 5+ months to just access the same old DLC, they need to spend to buy DLC and have also wasted resources subbing for the time since Hist when no new content was released. They could have saved $15 a month, bought a few 5500 crowns for $24 packs, and bought the DLC a long time ago.
My point is that people cannot accurately determine the value of the sub when ZOS keeps next quarter's plans secret, when they don't meet expectations (like the quarterly DLC plan that only lasted 5 months), and when they change their model on a whim. And managing a sub is not as simple as sub-unsub.
@DaveMoeDee
The value is simple. From that day they sign up and 30-90 days in the future....Do you want to spend X for the listed benefits?
It's a yes or No
If it's not yes....don't buy
It's literally that simple. If you or anyone is subscribing for anything other than current benefits as in, something you gain as soon as you pay, I'd suggest that you not pay and wait
No, it is not literally that simple. Reread my post. It is explained there.
The flaw in your reasoning is that people don't stop playing the game when they end their sub. This is a question of total cost over your complete time in game. How much you spend on the game will be the sum of buying the game/chapters, buying crowns, and paying for subs. How much will it cost me to have access to all DLC from now through the end of the year? With a sub, it will cost $165 (a little less if buying 6 months at a time). What will it cost if I buy DLC? We have no idea because we don't know how much DLC will cost. How much will access to all DLC be next year? $180 through sub. We have no idea if we buy outright because we don't even know if they will actually deliver 3 DLC and we don't know how much they will cost.
If after the DB DLC we tried to predict the future to see how much access to DLC would be worth, we might estimate around 2500 crowns/quarter because we had 4 consecutive DLC and the average was around there. With all of the crown sales, that ends up a little over $10/quarter or $4/month. But if we consider the 1500 crowns with the sub and the crafting bag (and even the small perks), the sub could feel worth it. It felt even more worth it when the first DLC dropped because we had not yet seen sales on crowns and 5500 crowns for $40 was the best deal, closer to $7/month for DLC.
Someone trying to decide whether to maintain their access to DLC through outright purchase or a sub would need to consider the expected cost per month. The problem is that when you stop adding new DLC, you are now just paying to maintain access to old DLC. ZOS knows what it will try to deliver. We don't until they announce it. If I sub 12 month for $90 worth of DLC, DLC is contributing $5/month to the value I am getting from my sub. If the next year they release no DLC, over two years I received the same $90 worth of DLC for $360. That means DLC ends up contributing only $2.50 to the value of the sub.
That is why players can't properly evaluate the value the sub adds to the game without knowing future releases.
If you make financial decisions without anticipating the future, you are going to leave a lot of money on the table.
@DaveMoeDee
It actually is that simple. I've been doing it since 2014. There was a time where I lost access to everything and later it was only dlc I didn't buy with the crowns provided from the ESO plus sub.
The financial decision is 30, 60 or 90 days in most cases based on the sub chosen.
The decision is do I buy 30, 60 or 90 days worth.
You aren't talking about the subscription tho, you're talking about what you can afford or what you are willing to pay and that is a personal decision.
Options are
-spend money
-don't spend money
It's simple.
You're saying it's complicated and the decision for you to spend money is based on what you get immediately and what you're going to get in the unforeseen future.
You are complicating your decision because you're trying to decide on something without information.
That's you're choice and each of us has that opportunity however it seems your choice is trying to get as much as you can out of what you spend vs getting what you want out of what you spend.
See the difference?
No. I am not talking about what I can afford. If you see two cars and you can afford them both, which do you choose? That is what I am talking about. In fact, nowhere do I mention anything about what people can afford. Why are you mentioning something irrelevant and attributing it to me? Are you just not able to follow because it is a wall of text? If I shorten it, there will be gaps in the explanation.
The decision when you buy anything is part of your overall finances. I lay this all out above. I would be able to accept you disagreement if you displayed that you understood what I said. That clearly is not the case based on your comment about what I can afford.
"Options are -spend money -don't spend money" is silly. You spend money both ways, sub or direct DLC purchase. Don't be obtuse. For people who plan to have all the DLC, the option is not usually sub/don't sub. The option is sub/buy with crowns.
I would agree with the idea that it has long been clear that the value from DLC was decreasing and people should have considered that more honestly, if you were actually making that point.
@DaveMoeDee
Please don't let my comments upset you.
I really just see it that simple.
In your example of looking at two cars, let's use that. Is a good context.
I see that as a very simple decision.
I have the finances for both but will choose one or the other (for me) because I don't see value in buying two cars and only being able to drive one at a time. The decision is simple
The game has DLC, crowns and expansions (three choices).
I have the money to buy all three every time they come up, however, (for me) the choice is very simple.
I'm only buying one of the three because all three always give me access to something. What I want to do determines which I buy. (That is very simple)
Actual Example:
Right now I'm working on completing Craglorn again and finishing up make guild books. Because I'm in Craglorn I purchased a sub because while doing those quests, that environment has nirncrux which I see as valuable to me.
Actual example2:
In November - December I was off from work for three weeks on vacation. From memory there was a crown sale and a event. I did not buy a sub and instead purchased a crown pack b cause I decided to make a new alt but knew that some time in the future I would problably spend crowns on something so I picked up $50 worth (11,000)
Actual example 3:
September - October:
I wasn't playing much due to my partyime job so I let me subscription stop and didn't buy crown either
All of those are very simple and none require knowledge of what's coming in the future. These decisions are based on 30,60 or 90 days because that's is how ZOS lays out their updates and content.
It doesn't matter if you think your examples don't require knowledge of the future. I gave a clear account of how people need to make assumptions about the future to decide about the sub. Your examples would be like me seeing a hat and saying this is not a duck, seeing a car and saying this is not a duck, seeing a show and saying this is not a duck, and then concluding "there are not ducks". Counter examples aren't a real response.
@DaveMoeDee
It's not that you and or others have to have the same view on making decisions. It's the reality that the decision can be simple or complex based on what each individual decides.
It does matter that my decisions don't require future knowledge because that what creates simplicity.
It also matters that your decisions hope for or attempt to decide on the unknown because that's what makes it complicated.
It matters but neither of us have to do one, the other or either because the next person may decide not to buy anything. That can be both simple and complicated as well
DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »DaveMoeDee wrote: »NewBlacksmurf wrote: »I still don't understand why someone who chooses to continue their subscription wouldn't stop whenever they felt there wasn't value
Because they cannot know the value of a sub because they don't know ZOS plans.
What is the value of a sub to a player? A major part is access to DLC. How much is access to DLC worth? Access to DLC is worth the cost of buying with crowns. How do I determine if subbing next month is worth it if I don't know when the next DLC will come out? I can't determine that. It is easy to say "just cancel the sub", but then they lose access to the DLC and need to spend additional resources to get access to the DLC. Imagine someone unsubbed before the Morrowind announcement and bought all the old DLC. Then, a different announcement was made the the content would be $40 and INCLUDED in sub. If they sub again, they essentially wasted the resources they spend on all the old DLC they want to retain access to.
If they instead continued to sub to retain access to old DLC while waiting for new, they would have been met with the announcement we got IRL where the new DLC is not DLC and not included. Now, when they cancel the sub to not pay for the next 5+ months to just access the same old DLC, they need to spend to buy DLC and have also wasted resources subbing for the time since Hist when no new content was released. They could have saved $15 a month, bought a few 5500 crowns for $24 packs, and bought the DLC a long time ago.
My point is that people cannot accurately determine the value of the sub when ZOS keeps next quarter's plans secret, when they don't meet expectations (like the quarterly DLC plan that only lasted 5 months), and when they change their model on a whim. And managing a sub is not as simple as sub-unsub.
@DaveMoeDee
The value is simple. From that day they sign up and 30-90 days in the future....Do you want to spend X for the listed benefits?
It's a yes or No
If it's not yes....don't buy
It's literally that simple. If you or anyone is subscribing for anything other than current benefits as in, something you gain as soon as you pay, I'd suggest that you not pay and wait
No, it is not literally that simple. Reread my post. It is explained there.
The flaw in your reasoning is that people don't stop playing the game when they end their sub. This is a question of total cost over your complete time in game. How much you spend on the game will be the sum of buying the game/chapters, buying crowns, and paying for subs. How much will it cost me to have access to all DLC from now through the end of the year? With a sub, it will cost $165 (a little less if buying 6 months at a time). What will it cost if I buy DLC? We have no idea because we don't know how much DLC will cost. How much will access to all DLC be next year? $180 through sub. We have no idea if we buy outright because we don't even know if they will actually deliver 3 DLC and we don't know how much they will cost.
If after the DB DLC we tried to predict the future to see how much access to DLC would be worth, we might estimate around 2500 crowns/quarter because we had 4 consecutive DLC and the average was around there. With all of the crown sales, that ends up a little over $10/quarter or $4/month. But if we consider the 1500 crowns with the sub and the crafting bag (and even the small perks), the sub could feel worth it. It felt even more worth it when the first DLC dropped because we had not yet seen sales on crowns and 5500 crowns for $40 was the best deal, closer to $7/month for DLC.
Someone trying to decide whether to maintain their access to DLC through outright purchase or a sub would need to consider the expected cost per month. The problem is that when you stop adding new DLC, you are now just paying to maintain access to old DLC. ZOS knows what it will try to deliver. We don't until they announce it. If I sub 12 month for $90 worth of DLC, DLC is contributing $5/month to the value I am getting from my sub. If the next year they release no DLC, over two years I received the same $90 worth of DLC for $360. That means DLC ends up contributing only $2.50 to the value of the sub.
That is why players can't properly evaluate the value the sub adds to the game without knowing future releases.
If you make financial decisions without anticipating the future, you are going to leave a lot of money on the table.
@DaveMoeDee
It actually is that simple. I've been doing it since 2014. There was a time where I lost access to everything and later it was only dlc I didn't buy with the crowns provided from the ESO plus sub.
The financial decision is 30, 60 or 90 days in most cases based on the sub chosen.
The decision is do I buy 30, 60 or 90 days worth.
You aren't talking about the subscription tho, you're talking about what you can afford or what you are willing to pay and that is a personal decision.
Options are
-spend money
-don't spend money
It's simple.
You're saying it's complicated and the decision for you to spend money is based on what you get immediately and what you're going to get in the unforeseen future.
You are complicating your decision because you're trying to decide on something without information.
That's you're choice and each of us has that opportunity however it seems your choice is trying to get as much as you can out of what you spend vs getting what you want out of what you spend.
See the difference?
No. I am not talking about what I can afford. If you see two cars and you can afford them both, which do you choose? That is what I am talking about. In fact, nowhere do I mention anything about what people can afford. Why are you mentioning something irrelevant and attributing it to me? Are you just not able to follow because it is a wall of text? If I shorten it, there will be gaps in the explanation.
The decision when you buy anything is part of your overall finances. I lay this all out above. I would be able to accept you disagreement if you displayed that you understood what I said. That clearly is not the case based on your comment about what I can afford.
"Options are -spend money -don't spend money" is silly. You spend money both ways, sub or direct DLC purchase. Don't be obtuse. For people who plan to have all the DLC, the option is not usually sub/don't sub. The option is sub/buy with crowns.
I would agree with the idea that it has long been clear that the value from DLC was decreasing and people should have considered that more honestly, if you were actually making that point.
@DaveMoeDee
Please don't let my comments upset you.
I really just see it that simple.
In your example of looking at two cars, let's use that. Is a good context.
I see that as a very simple decision.
I have the finances for both but will choose one or the other (for me) because I don't see value in buying two cars and only being able to drive one at a time. The decision is simple
The game has DLC, crowns and expansions (three choices).
I have the money to buy all three every time they come up, however, (for me) the choice is very simple.
I'm only buying one of the three because all three always give me access to something. What I want to do determines which I buy. (That is very simple)
Actual Example:
Right now I'm working on completing Craglorn again and finishing up make guild books. Because I'm in Craglorn I purchased a sub because while doing those quests, that environment has nirncrux which I see as valuable to me.
Actual example2:
In November - December I was off from work for three weeks on vacation. From memory there was a crown sale and a event. I did not buy a sub and instead purchased a crown pack b cause I decided to make a new alt but knew that some time in the future I would problably spend crowns on something so I picked up $50 worth (11,000)
Actual example 3:
September - October:
I wasn't playing much due to my partyime job so I let me subscription stop and didn't buy crown either
All of those are very simple and none require knowledge of what's coming in the future. These decisions are based on 30,60 or 90 days because that's is how ZOS lays out their updates and content.
It doesn't matter if you think your examples don't require knowledge of the future. I gave a clear account of how people need to make assumptions about the future to decide about the sub. Your examples would be like me seeing a hat and saying this is not a duck, seeing a car and saying this is not a duck, seeing a show and saying this is not a duck, and then concluding "there are not ducks". Counter examples aren't a real response.
@DaveMoeDee
It's not that you and or others have to have the same view on making decisions. It's the reality that the decision can be simple or complex based on what each individual decides.
It does matter that my decisions don't require future knowledge because that what creates simplicity.
It also matters that your decisions hope for or attempt to decide on the unknown because that's what makes it complicated.
It matters but neither of us have to do one, the other or either because the next person may decide not to buy anything. That can be both simple and complicated as well
Let's do a "simple" analysis that doesn't consider the future.
When IC was released, what is the simple choice regarding sub or buy with crowns? Sub, of course. Why?
Sub, $15, gives you access now.
No sub, 2500 crowns. At $25 for 3000 (no sales yet when IC was released), IC costs $25. Why not buy 5500 pack? You only need 2500. Since we are being simple, we don't know that we will still be playing the game next month or next quarter when next DLC drops.
Running cost total for simpleton:
$15, since that is cheaper than $25
Next month. No new DLC but still want IC.
Sub, $15, gives you access now.
No sub, 2500 crowns.
Running cost total for simpleton:
$30, since $15 is cheaper than $25 and we don't know if we will still like the game next month.
Next month, repeat. Now the simpleton has spent $45 on IC access.
New quarter, Orsinium drops. 3000 crowns. Around the time it drops, ZOS has first crown sale, 5500 for $24. I don't remember the sale was around on launch day, but let's assume it was:
4th month, Orsinium drops.
Sub, $15 - access to 2 DLC
No sub, 5500 crowns for 2 DLC, costs $24.
$15 < $24
Running cost total for simpleton:
$60
We can do on and on. The simple decision-making of the simpleton is going to cost them a lot of extra money. I'm not sure why you are so adamant that people should make "simple" decisions.