Pixel_Zealot wrote: »I'm genuinely curious what @ZOS_RichLambert or @ZOS_GinaBruno have to say about this. I'm seeing a lot of angry discussions about the DLC being called an Expansion, and thus they aren't obligated to share it with subscribers, instead everyone has to buy it.
So people are angry about subscribing for years under the impression they will have access to content released in the future and then this expansion is an exception. Why should I continue subbing and supporting Zos if this is the case? What was your thinking behind making this decision? I'm want to know before I jump on the #hatetrain and uninstall.
PS: Yes I will send you guys my stuff if I uninstall.
Chilly-McFreeze wrote: »Not sure about the 4 DLC per year statement either. It could be 4 updates per year that includes free ones like 1T and Homestead.
1t and Homestead are not DLCs. They are changes to the base game. Think of it like this, if you go out and buy the base game from a shop today (well ok, after Homestead is released *g*), would you also need to download additional content to get access to 1T and Homestead?Again if that's the only reason you sub then you can call it off anytime.
This is very true. However, what if we have been subbed for the past 6 months without receiving the 2 promised quarterly DLCs? Do we not have a right to be a little upset about that? We can indeed unsub, but we won't be getting our money back.
^^ That's the issue for me, they've not delivered any DLC for quite some time, the first time they do, they reclassify it to avoid having to give it to sub holders. Most certainly when I took out my sub the wording was very clear that it included 'access to all downloadable content' (ZOS' words).
For now, I'm going to watch this unfold, I've subbed since release - albeit with a break - but I'm not angry at this point because it's hard for me to know the context just from watching ESO Live. If this is a big uplift to the game and content, I'd possibly accept it's an expansion and pay as it's not a lot of money and I am a pragmatic person, but then there is a principle at stake here.
One question, do other MMOs use this model of voluntary sub plus paid expacs? Did Trion/Rift do this, I can't remember now?
I am quite certain that if someone in the EU/UK challenged this, ZOS would come unstuck here. I am not going to detail why here because I don't intend to do ZOS' job for them ;-), but suffice to say myself and a lawyer challenged Frontier Developments and got refunds for hundreds of Elite Dangerous Kickstarter Backers when FD dropped Offline Mode. Anyone selling to an EU buyer is bound by EU law and ZOS do have an EU legal entity that can be challenged: ZeniMax Online Ireland Ltd., Unit 2 Galway West Business Park, Western Distributor Road, Rahoon, Galway, Co. Galway, Ireland.
So, having taken on a big software company and won before, my message to anyone in the EU thinking they do want to challenge ZOS is:
1 - Ignore the DLC/Expansion matter, it's meaningless in EU law, it's all digital content.
2 - Be patient and watch this unfold and gather everything. Screenshot all ZOS comms, all AMAs, keep all your emails from ZOS, document ESO Live etc. One reason we beat Frontier so easily is because we had hundreds of people who had diligently recorded everything and whilst FD tried to amend their website later, we had it all recorded historically and could prove terms that existed at the time in question.
3 - Ignore anything in a EULA that implies ZOS can do what they like, EULAs have no meaning in the EU as it is impossible to sign away your rights or degrade your position under EU law.
4 - Collaborate with other people to present a unified case. We don't have class actions suits in the EU, so we have to form a united front ourselves.
EDIT: I think I should add here I'm not suggesting people do take on ZOS, it was quite time consuming for me with Frontier Devs, even though they folded quite fast due to the strength of our case. It was the right thing to do however, and many Kickstarter backers had invested hundreds and in one case, thousands, of ££. Here we're talking about a very small cost. But, principles are principles, sometimes you just have to hold companies to account. All cases are different however... DYOR as they say!
@Pibbles does 1) include only additional digital content that has to be paid for? If not, wouldn't the so called "base game patches" (1T, Housing) fall into the "digital content" as well?
And how does this goes with the option to buy a physical copy of the additional content (Morrowind, Gold Edition)?
I'm really curiouse about that. Even if I think it's a bit over the top that this discussion has come to this point.
GrumpyMuffin wrote: »at the risk of being thick. I have an observation about that passage you linked to. They suggest that four dlc was proving too hard to do with their resources. Fine, but to then suggest that they will do a big expansion and three dlc seems more work than four which they couldn't do. Hmm. Doesn't give me much confidence about the size of future dlc.
They already stated almost a year ago that they plan to release more 'smaller' DLCs instead of large ones... which tells me they were already planning for the Morrowind expansion during that time, they just didn't tell us that part. So yes, I would expect more DLCs like "SoTH", "Dark Brotherhood", "Thieves Guild", as it will make the yearly 'expansion' seem more worthwhile in purchasing by comparison.


GrumpyMuffin wrote: »at the risk of being thick. I have an observation about that passage you linked to. They suggest that four dlc was proving too hard to do with their resources. Fine, but to then suggest that they will do a big expansion and three dlc seems more work than four which they couldn't do. Hmm. Doesn't give me much confidence about the size of future dlc.
They already stated almost a year ago that they plan to release more 'smaller' DLCs instead of large ones... which tells me they were already planning for the Morrowind expansion during that time, they just didn't tell us that part. So yes, I would expect more DLCs like "SoTH", "Dark Brotherhood", "Thieves Guild", as it will make the yearly 'expansion' seem more worthwhile in purchasing by comparison.
This year will feature four major events:
Homestead, our player housing DLC, in February
ESO: Morrowind, our first Chapter release, in June
A dungeon-based DLC in the third quarter
A content-based DLC in the fourth quarter
We will – of course – provide a base patch with each of these launches that will provide quality of life fixes, updates, balance changes, and other items. For more on each of these events, keep reading.
A new content Cadence
Because we will be regularly introducing Chapters to ESO, we are going to make a small revision to our content delivery cadence, starting this year. We will continue to ship quarterly updates to the game – each with a base patch that has all the balance, quality of life, and bug fixes that you have come to expect. Additionally, we'll have a DLC in the first quarter of each year, a Chapter in the second quarter, a dungeon-based DLC in the third quarter, and a DLC in the 4th quarter.
*Source: Welcome to 2017
Chilly-McFreeze wrote: »Not sure about the 4 DLC per year statement either. It could be 4 updates per year that includes free ones like 1T and Homestead.
1t and Homestead are not DLCs. They are changes to the base game. Think of it like this, if you go out and buy the base game from a shop today (well ok, after Homestead is released *g*), would you also need to download additional content to get access to 1T and Homestead?Again if that's the only reason you sub then you can call it off anytime.
This is very true. However, what if we have been subbed for the past 6 months without receiving the 2 promised quarterly DLCs? Do we not have a right to be a little upset about that? We can indeed unsub, but we won't be getting our money back.
^^ That's the issue for me, they've not delivered any DLC for quite some time, the first time they do, they reclassify it to avoid having to give it to sub holders. Most certainly when I took out my sub the wording was very clear that it included 'access to all downloadable content' (ZOS' words).
For now, I'm going to watch this unfold, I've subbed since release - albeit with a break - but I'm not angry at this point because it's hard for me to know the context just from watching ESO Live. If this is a big uplift to the game and content, I'd possibly accept it's an expansion and pay as it's not a lot of money and I am a pragmatic person, but then there is a principle at stake here.
One question, do other MMOs use this model of voluntary sub plus paid expacs? Did Trion/Rift do this, I can't remember now?
I am quite certain that if someone in the EU/UK challenged this, ZOS would come unstuck here. I am not going to detail why here because I don't intend to do ZOS' job for them ;-), but suffice to say myself and a lawyer challenged Frontier Developments and got refunds for hundreds of Elite Dangerous Kickstarter Backers when FD dropped Offline Mode. Anyone selling to an EU buyer is bound by EU law and ZOS do have an EU legal entity that can be challenged: ZeniMax Online Ireland Ltd., Unit 2 Galway West Business Park, Western Distributor Road, Rahoon, Galway, Co. Galway, Ireland.
So, having taken on a big software company and won before, my message to anyone in the EU thinking they do want to challenge ZOS is:
1 - Ignore the DLC/Expansion matter, it's meaningless in EU law, it's all digital content.
2 - Be patient and watch this unfold and gather everything. Screenshot all ZOS comms, all AMAs, keep all your emails from ZOS, document ESO Live etc. One reason we beat Frontier so easily is because we had hundreds of people who had diligently recorded everything and whilst FD tried to amend their website later, we had it all recorded historically and could prove terms that existed at the time in question.
3 - Ignore anything in a EULA that implies ZOS can do what they like, EULAs have no meaning in the EU as it is impossible to sign away your rights or degrade your position under EU law.
4 - Collaborate with other people to present a unified case. We don't have class actions suits in the EU, so we have to form a united front ourselves.
EDIT: I think I should add here I'm not suggesting people do take on ZOS, it was quite time consuming for me with Frontier Devs, even though they folded quite fast due to the strength of our case. It was the right thing to do however, and many Kickstarter backers had invested hundreds and in one case, thousands, of ££. Here we're talking about a very small cost. But, principles are principles, sometimes you just have to hold companies to account. All cases are different however... DYOR as they say!
@Pibbles does 1) include only additional digital content that has to be paid for? If not, wouldn't the so called "base game patches" (1T, Housing) fall into the "digital content" as well?
And how does this goes with the option to buy a physical copy of the additional content (Morrowind, Gold Edition)?
I'm really curiouse about that. Even if I think it's a bit over the top that this discussion has come to this point.
Hi @Chilly-McFreeze, apologies for the delay I've been away.
Yes, in the eyes of the law (UK & EU) anything downloaded is digital content, DVD/CD/Bluray is 'goods' and was already covered by the Sale of Goods Act, which is now called the Consumer Rights Act (in the UK, but EU is the same as we get our consumer laws from there), and covers digital content in the same way. Interestingly, 'free' digital content comes with the same protections as paid, so if 'free' breaks something, it can be a breach of contract due to 'not fit for purpose' type stuff.
We've been talking about this in another thread called 'the fine print' (can't find it now), it's kind of a fun conversation, nothing heavy, we're theorising more than anything, and what we feel it turns on is how the ESO+ contract is renewed each sub period and if ZOS formally notify us in the renewal terms that the 'expacs' are not included in ESO+. If they do this, then we have notice and can choose not buy the sub anymore and don't suffer a 'loss'. If they do not do that, it's questionable because most people do not read the forum so would be unware of a new constraint being placed upon their sub, and you cannot change a contract without agreement from both parties, that's when ZOS would stand to get into trouble IMO, if someone challenged them of course.
Here's a high level guide to digital content law in the UK. https://www.gov.uk/government/news/new-rights-for-consumers-when-buying-digital-content, you can see mention of the things we've been talking about such as, "consumers being able to challenge terms and conditions which are not fair or are hidden in the small print".
What I intend to do is drop the sub as I do not trust ZOS to deliver meaningful ESO+ included content (based on TG and DB which felt rushed to me), and if Morrowind gets good reviews from my esteemed fellow gamers here, then I'll buy it outright. I wonder how this will work out for ZOS though, very few people seem minded to keep the sub AND pay for expacs once per year, you're looking at 120ukp a year on ESO then, rather steep really, and 30ukp per year on the expac is a lot less than the 82ukp a year I pay now for my ESO+ sub.
ArcVelarian wrote: »If it comes in a box and it is called an expansion, then it is not Downloadable Content (DLC).
Pixel_Zealot wrote: »
Chilly-McFreeze wrote: »


Spectral_Lord wrote: »From my understanding ESO+ only covers content that is released and purchasable through the Crown Store as well--which Morrowind will not be.
Spectral_Lord wrote: »From my understanding ESO+ only covers content that is released and purchasable through the Crown Store as well--which Morrowind will not be.
Prof_Bawbag wrote: »out of interest, where is that insinuated? I can't seem to find anything that would make anyone think that. They should have explicitly stated that all free content only covered CS items. Not for us to 2nd guess what our sub actually entails. I'm not against having to pay for it, so I have no axe to grind either way, but I just think you've randomly made that up because it's currently the way it is.
If you can provide a link or something that backs your understanding up, then I'll be big enough to accept you're correct, and I'm wrong.
GrumpyMuffin wrote: »at the risk of being thick. I have an observation about that passage you linked to. They suggest that four dlc was proving too hard to do with their resources. Fine, but to then suggest that they will do a big expansion and three dlc seems more work than four which they couldn't do. Hmm. Doesn't give me much confidence about the size of future dlc.
They already stated almost a year ago that they plan to release more 'smaller' DLCs instead of large ones... which tells me they were already planning for the Morrowind expansion during that time, they just didn't tell us that part. So yes, I would expect more DLCs like "SoTH", "Dark Brotherhood", "Thieves Guild", as it will make the yearly 'expansion' seem more worthwhile in purchasing by comparison.
Good point. However, they were not able to make any Crown Store DLC while they were working on Morrowind and a QoL base game patch (which Matt Firor does refer to as a DLC).This year will feature four major events:
Homestead, our player housing DLC, in February
ESO: Morrowind, our first Chapter release, in June
A dungeon-based DLC in the third quarter
A content-based DLC in the fourth quarter
We will – of course – provide a base patch with each of these launches that will provide quality of life fixes, updates, balance changes, and other items. For more on each of these events, keep reading.
A new content Cadence
Because we will be regularly introducing Chapters to ESO, we are going to make a small revision to our content delivery cadence, starting this year. We will continue to ship quarterly updates to the game – each with a base patch that has all the balance, quality of life, and bug fixes that you have come to expect. Additionally, we'll have a DLC in the first quarter of each year, a Chapter in the second quarter, a dungeon-based DLC in the third quarter, and a DLC in the 4th quarter.
*Source: Welcome to 2017
I do have doubts about whether they will able to keep the above release schedule since they couldn't manage that kind of schedule while working on their first Chapter. Only time will tell if they can manage it with their resources.
I do understand why ESO+ subscribers are upset. I have a sub myself, though I also purchased the Gold edition so really, the only DLC I have access to right now that I wouldn't otherwise is SoH and, as Pibbles said, I wouldn't miss it otherwise. I'd planned on using my sub as a chance to try out new content and then decide if I wanted to purchase it outright or not. Since that won't be possible with Morrowind, I've got some serious thinking to do on whether the craft bag and the 10% research gain is worth it to me (because that's all I really care about with what's left).
As for the DLC/expansion/chapter debacle, it'd be really great if ZoS would settle on what's what with clearly defined terms for transparency's sake. As I said above, Matt referred to Homestead as DLC, but at an earlier point in time, DLC (regarding ESO+) was brought up as needing to be paid for and, those who wanted it could purchase it ala carte if they wanted but would otherwise have access to with their sub. At one point (it's been quoted around here somewhere) they referred to future content as expansions and said those would be included in ESO+. When the developers toss the terms around interchangeably or define them as being x at this point in time only, it's no wonder that some of their customers are confused as well.
As I live in California, we tend to not take this stuff too lightly, so for fits and giggles, I'm going to look at all my options as a consumer and see if I can pursue this through other channels if we don't get some resolution. Not really into paying for a year to get all available new content then having the goal posts moved by stealth.
Pixel_Zealot wrote: »
yep totally agree...after paying over £50.00 for the game and also paying a monthly subscription... to make you pay again for another expansion or whatever theyre calling it, is a disgrace
GreenhaloX wrote: »It's a business of making money, profits and ensuring revenues to support operations, developments and employees' paychecks! You can't expect a business to continuously dish out products and not charge a fee/price. Even if it would be "politically correct"to be a DLC, it will still cost money to get it. ESO plus members paying subscription for DLC, and non-ESO members having to pay separate fee/prices if they want to access a DLC. So, either way you're paying to play this game. Usually, those people complaining are probably those expecting everything to be handed to them on a silver platter. They want the cake and eat it too. People will also just complain about anything for the sake of complaining; doesn't matter if it's good or bad.
GreenhaloX wrote: »It's a business of making money, profits and ensuring revenues to support operations, developments and employees' paychecks! You can't expect a business to continuously dish out products and not charge a fee/price. Even if it would be "politically correct"to be a DLC, it will still cost money to get it. ESO plus members paying subscription for DLC, and non-ESO members having to pay separate fee/prices if they want to access a DLC. So, either way you're paying to play this game. Usually, those people complaining are probably those expecting everything to be handed to them on a silver platter. They want the cake and eat it too. People will also just complain about anything for the sake of complaining; doesn't matter if it's good or bad.
Sadly this is true, but can we expect anything less from the era of 'entitlement'?!?
GreenhaloX wrote: »It's a business of making money, profits and ensuring revenues to support operations, developments and employees' paychecks! You can't expect a business to continuously dish out products and not charge a fee/price.
Prof_Bawbag wrote: »out of interest, where is that insinuated? I can't seem to find anything that would make anyone think that. They should have explicitly stated that all free content only covered CS items. Not for us to 2nd guess what our sub actually entails. I'm not against having to pay for it, so I have no axe to grind either way, but I just think you've randomly made that up because it's currently the way it is.
If you can provide a link or something that backs your understanding up, then I'll be big enough to accept you're correct, and I'm wrong.
They recently (as best as I can tell, when they announced Morrowind) stealth changed the wording in some of their communications from "access to all available DLC game packs" to "access to all DLC game packs available in the Crown Store". When people first started complaining about this issue, others defending Zos' position read the latest info from ZOS, saw the "Crown Store" comment, and used it to say that those complaining had no case without realising it had only just been changed.
See the first post in this thread for an example of this change: https://forums.elderscrollsonline.com/en/discussion/318113/just-a-quick-comparison/p1
