I agree with a lot of your post, except addons do not do the same thing for free - to respec skill points you need to visit a respec shrine and pay gold, or use a respec scroll. To change between WW and Vampire you need to go cure one then do the quest for the other (each time you want to swap) or buy those things from the crown store.
Addons cannot and do not do those things.
Do they not realize that mods do the same thing, for free? They rarely ever come out with free QoL updates anymore; it's all behind an unaffordable pay wall meant to target whales.
WhyMustItBe wrote: »Do they not realize that mods do the same thing, for free? They rarely ever come out with free QoL updates anymore; it's all behind an unaffordable pay wall meant to target whales.
Something that amazes and saddens me is that, with the huge number of whales in this game willing to shell out thousands of dollars a month for basically virtual cosmetics, these same big spenders will basically NEVER toss a donation or sponsor the patreon of the popular mod authors that make actual resources and tools they use to enhance their gaming experience in a tangible way.
It is like it is only cool to throw money at people who are already rich. The psychology is deeply disturbing to me.
Not gonna defend ESO's monetization generally, but WoW and FFXIV are sub only, so this isn't really comparable. If you sub to ESO those dungeons are included as is the Q4 DLC.2) This brings me to the issue of DLCs and expansions. If you compare ESO to World of Warcraft, or Final Fantasy XIV, the amount of content in each expansion is abysmal, but the price is exactly the same, or even more expensive. Take Legion or Shadowbringers; at least five new zones in each, several raids, dozens of new class abilities, new classes, huge updates QoL and otherwise, etc. In comparison, with Blackwood we get one relatively small zone largely using the same assets across the entire map (outside of Leyawiin, which I admit has great assets), one raid, a VERY poorly made Companion System, and that's about it. Instead, what ESO tends to do is make you pay for DLC on top of the expansion in order to get a decent experience, such as with Dungeons and an additional zone. To begin with, every new expansion should have at least two dungeons INCLUDED with it. They should not be barred behind additional DLC. WoW and FFXIV's expansions each introduce anywhere from 5-10 new dungeons, roughly.
PeacefulAnarchy wrote: »Not gonna defend ESO's monetization generally, but WoW and FFXIV are sub only, so this isn't really comparable. If you sub to ESO those dungeons are included as is the Q4 DLC.2) This brings me to the issue of DLCs and expansions. If you compare ESO to World of Warcraft, or Final Fantasy XIV, the amount of content in each expansion is abysmal, but the price is exactly the same, or even more expensive. Take Legion or Shadowbringers; at least five new zones in each, several raids, dozens of new class abilities, new classes, huge updates QoL and otherwise, etc. In comparison, with Blackwood we get one relatively small zone largely using the same assets across the entire map (outside of Leyawiin, which I admit has great assets), one raid, a VERY poorly made Companion System, and that's about it. Instead, what ESO tends to do is make you pay for DLC on top of the expansion in order to get a decent experience, such as with Dungeons and an additional zone. To begin with, every new expansion should have at least two dungeons INCLUDED with it. They should not be barred behind additional DLC. WoW and FFXIV's expansions each introduce anywhere from 5-10 new dungeons, roughly.
As someone who doesn't sub I prefer ESO's implementation of DLC/expansions, even if the prices are all a bit steep for my liking.
I agree with a lot of your post, except addons do not do the same thing for free - to respec skill points you need to visit a respec shrine and pay gold, or use a respec scroll. To change between WW and Vampire you need to go cure one then do the quest for the other (each time you want to swap) or buy those things from the crown store.
Addons cannot and do not do those things.
Fair enough. I edited my post.
A lot of our society is like this, unfortunately.
Also I strongly suspect that the assistant will be crown store only and probably cost a lot.
joerginger wrote: »
Also I strongly suspect that the assistant will be crown store only and probably cost a lot.
No need to suspect that. They said so loud and clear on stream. Of course it will only be in the crown store. And the price of assistants has been known for ages and it certainly isn't cheap.
There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
I'm sorry, but these arguments are so tired that I'm not going to bother replying. You're wrong; they specifically hire people to prioritize the psychological manipulation of players to make them feel pressured/obligated into maximizing their spending.
There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
I'm sorry, but these arguments are so tired that I'm not going to bother replying. You're wrong; they specifically hire people to prioritize the psychological manipulation of players to make them feel pressured/obligated into maximizing their spending.
Practice willpower then. You can ignore the crown store in this game far more than you can in GW2 or in BDO.
There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
I'm sorry, but these arguments are so tired that I'm not going to bother replying. You're wrong; they specifically hire people to prioritize the psychological manipulation of players to make them feel pressured/obligated into maximizing their spending.
There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
I'm sorry, but these arguments are so tired that I'm not going to bother replying. You're wrong; they specifically hire people to prioritize the psychological manipulation of players to make them feel pressured/obligated into maximizing their spending.
but you did bother.
And your examples were subscription based games. At least with ESO the choice is yours.
There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
AuraStorm43 wrote: »
Saying its “pay for convenience” ignores the fact that ESO makes things inconvenient on purpose to encourage crown store purchases
Its the same thing as “time savers” ignoring the fact the game wasted your time to encourage those purchases
There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
I'm sorry, but these arguments are so tired that I'm not going to bother replying. You're wrong; they specifically hire people to prioritize the psychological manipulation of players to make them feel pressured/obligated into maximizing their spending.
Practice willpower then. You can ignore the crown store in this game far more than you can in GW2 or in BDO.
It's nothing about my own willpower. You're enabling horribly unethical behavior with that mindset.
AuraStorm43 wrote: »There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
Saying its “pay for convenience” ignores the fact that ESO makes things inconvenient on purpose to encourage crown store purchases
Its the same thing as “time savers” ignoring the fact the game wasted your time to encourage those purchases
There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
I'm sorry, but these arguments are so tired that I'm not going to bother replying. You're wrong; they specifically hire people to prioritize the psychological manipulation of players to make them feel pressured/obligated into maximizing their spending.
Practice willpower then. You can ignore the crown store in this game far more than you can in GW2 or in BDO.
It's nothing about my own willpower. I rarely ever purchase Crowns in this game. It's about the predatory and exploitative, unethical tactics that they are using. No one can contest that they are using unethical tactics; it's undeniable. You're enabling horribly unethical behavior with that mindset.
Chips_Ahoy wrote: »There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
I'm sorry, but these arguments are so tired that I'm not going to bother replying. You're wrong; they specifically hire people to prioritize the psychological manipulation of players to make them feel pressured/obligated into maximizing their spending.
Practice willpower then. You can ignore the crown store in this game far more than you can in GW2 or in BDO.
It's nothing about my own willpower. You're enabling horribly unethical behavior with that mindset.
what?
you are writing from a smartphone/pc that has components whose raw material is slave labor, and often child labor.
You're enabling horribly unethical behavior.
AuraStorm43 wrote: »
Saying its “pay for convenience” ignores the fact that ESO makes things inconvenient on purpose to encourage crown store purchases
Its the same thing as “time savers” ignoring the fact the game wasted your time to encourage those purchases
YUP.
AuraStorm43 wrote: »There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
Saying its “pay for convenience” ignores the fact that ESO makes things inconvenient on purpose to encourage crown store purchases
Its the same thing as “time savers” ignoring the fact the game wasted your time to encourage those purchases
Which of those inconveniences was not in the game at launch, when there was no Crown Store, though?There is nothing in the crown store that determines the outcome of the game. Nothing is being forced on any of us. When the game dropped requiring a subscription to play that revenue had to be generated through other means. That is why we have the crown store. It isn't predatory it is just there for your convenience. You are comparing ESO a game that has no monthly subscription to games that do have monthly subscriptions. If you are going to do that then you have to consider that all the DLCs in ESO come with the subscription. Essentially compared to the other games this is free content.
Crown crates are not gambling. You know the minimum number of items to expect from each crate just like packs of sports cards or any number of other things that do not fall under the definition of gambling. They can affect people with tendencies towards a gambling addiction just as actual gambling can but they are not gambling.
And there is no pay to win. There is pay for convenience. My crafting bag has never once kept me alive in Imperial City.
I'm sorry, but these arguments are so tired that I'm not going to bother replying. You're wrong; they specifically hire people to prioritize the psychological manipulation of players to make them feel pressured/obligated into maximizing their spending.
Practice willpower then. You can ignore the crown store in this game far more than you can in GW2 or in BDO.
It's nothing about my own willpower. I rarely ever purchase Crowns in this game. It's about the predatory and exploitative, unethical tactics that they are using. No one can contest that they are using unethical tactics; it's undeniable. You're enabling horribly unethical behavior with that mindset.
I'm not enabling it by ignoring it. I'm not falling for it. They are not getting any crowns out of me other than what I get from the subscription.
4) False-Scarcity. This is actually illegal for many retailers, but ESO gets away with it with no issue.