I agree with what you are saying, but, on a personal level, I think Morrowwind should still be a $40 DLC that should be included in ESO+... I'm not complaining about the pricing, but separate expansion on top of all other DLC release is a little frustrating.
Just imagine being subscribed to Netflix and it's charging $10 pay-per-view for a newly released high-budget series. You'd feel bad even if that particular show was worth that much money.
Sorry; I don't agree with your opinion.
This is my current hobby. I have no issues with paying to avoid aggravation at managing my inventory. I'm a crafter in 4 guilds; I need mats of all levels, all the tempers, for all the professions. While I have, as has everyone else who's been here for a long period of time, managed to do the inventory shuffle before the crafting bag existed, I am, personal opinion, ecstatically happy that I no longer have to do that. This game is actually one of the cheapest hobbies I've taken up.
Two accounts, 20 characters and counting. I'm one of the "old geezers" who played pen and paper D&D. My characters are individual, different backstory, different attitudes, different mindset when playing, even though I don't role-play. Your three generic characters suit your way of playing. I kind of got past that with the arcade/console games where you were The Hero, no customization available. I don't think I would have bothered with this game if I was restricted to just the holy stereotypes.
I cheerfully preordered Morrowind. I don't regret that either. The addition is worth paying for, for me, in my opinion. To others, of course, it isn't. I'm having a ball finding information and filling in the blanks in the history I originally found in Bethesda's single player Morrowind.
andreasranasen wrote: »I agree very much with the ESO+. There really isn't much benefit with getting ESO+. They really got to add something more valuable to charge $15/a month on something like this. It's really not worth it.
Kaymorolis wrote: »andreasranasen wrote: »I agree very much with the ESO+. There really isn't much benefit with getting ESO+. They really got to add something more valuable to charge $15/a month on something like this. It's really not worth it.
I really don't get these kinds of statements. The 1500 crowns you get would normally cost $15. That's the whole monthly fee right there. Add in the craft bag, bank space, % boosts and whatever else I have forgotten and it's totally worth the price.
theamazingx wrote: »Just pretend it's a sub-based game with new free content every 3 months and one large paid dlc a year, and each month you get this artificial currency to buy little cosmetic trinkets. That's the real model. It's quite satisfactory from that perspective. Unless, of course, you just want to jump into the game, cruise through the story in a day or two, and hop back out until the next story opens up. But MMOs that have constant upkeep costs can't really be expected to focus on that audience.
MasterSpatula wrote: »theamazingx wrote: »Just pretend it's a sub-based game with new free content every 3 months and one large paid dlc a year, and each month you get this artificial currency to buy little cosmetic trinkets. That's the real model. It's quite satisfactory from that perspective. Unless, of course, you just want to jump into the game, cruise through the story in a day or two, and hop back out until the next story opens up. But MMOs that have constant upkeep costs can't really be expected to focus on that audience.
More accurate to say ESO+ is precisely the same deal it was in its first year, only with one less DLC per year (one quarter is for Base Game changes), all for $40 more per year. So, let's see, that's getting 25% less for 23% more.
I agree with what you are saying, but, on a personal level, I think Morrowwind should still be a $40 DLC that should be included in ESO+... I'm not complaining about the pricing, but separate expansion on top of all other DLC release is a little frustrating.
Just imagine being subscribed to Netflix and it's charging $10 pay-per-view for a newly released high-budget series. You'd feel bad even if that particular show was worth that much money.
But I'm can't live without my crafting bag and also I have free access to all DLC except Morrowind because ZoS so evil, also free crowns each month, you may say. I say that you can't do a bit of inventory management and you are too comfortable. I say that you fail to see the bigger picture financially speaking. I used to have ESO+ just for two months and the only advantage I had was the crafting bag. The problem is that I played a lot of MMOs before and in some of them your inventory was quite restricted, but I learned how to manage it and make the inventory space less of a problem.It isn't hard, you only need to make the difference between junk and treasure. Also you have 8 character slots, in my case I need only three characters (a DD, a Tank and a Healer), the rest are to store stuff that I may need later. One of them is dedicated for those disguises you find on certain quests because I really love to collect them. I'm doing a lot of gathering and crafting, but still manage to have enough space on my inventory (my main has only 110 inventory spaces) because I sort everything. What I need right now is going to bank, what I keep for later is going on my alts.
If Zenimax just came out and said,
"We are reneging on our promise. Your $15 a month sub will no longer cover all downloadable content. Major roll-up additions to gameplay, systems, maps and storylines will now be priced separately. We would love it if you'd stay and enjoy the content but understand if you decide to leave.",
how many of you would still be playing?
If the answer is yes, you're complaining just to complain. If the answer is no, why are you still here?
MasterSpatula wrote: »theamazingx wrote: »Just pretend it's a sub-based game with new free content every 3 months and one large paid dlc a year, and each month you get this artificial currency to buy little cosmetic trinkets. That's the real model. It's quite satisfactory from that perspective. Unless, of course, you just want to jump into the game, cruise through the story in a day or two, and hop back out until the next story opens up. But MMOs that have constant upkeep costs can't really be expected to focus on that audience.
More accurate to say ESO+ is precisely the same deal it was in its first year, only with one less DLC per year (one quarter is for Base Game changes), all for $40 more per year. So, let's see, that's getting 25% less for 23% more.
Yeah, totally.
They haven't changed anything since the first year. Those 480 bank spaces have been here since the first year, right?
Oh, wait.... gee, some things might have changed just a bit since the first year...bank space, dying costumes, double the amount of items and collectibles you can have in your homes.
Congratulations on posting with teh drama though. LESS FOR MOAR!!!!!!!