What do you all think of the doom saying about the game by content creators?
I play games, I don't watch people playing them.
You mean like football players who don't watch football championships? And all the other athletes who don't watch any sports events? And artist who are not interested in other peoples art? Cooks who only eat their own food? I understand.
I think most "content creators" have hit diminishing returns in 2022 and their content is increasingly useless noise designed to generate clicks/engagement.
DirtyDeeds765 wrote: »I don't think much of it at all because they're playing the game because it's an MMO. Not because its an online Elder Scrolls game. The people who play it because its an online Elder Scrolls game will be the ones that keep it flourishing.
@DirtyDeeds765
DirtyDeeds765 wrote: »I don't think much of it at all because they're playing the game because it's an MMO. Not because its an online Elder Scrolls game. The people who play it because its an online Elder Scrolls game will be the ones that keep it flourishing.
I bet the people who play this game because it's an Elder Scrolls game are the first people who will leave ESO once TES VI launches, because they don't like playing an MMO-RPG, because well, you know that's what ESO is, an MMO-RPG. ESO is NOT a single player game. I've never played previous TES games, but I'm still here, and I've been playing this game since 2015.
Elder Scrolls fans are part of this community, but to tell me that you're the only part that's keeping this game alive is completely false. I've seen many Elder Scrolls fans say don't even consider ESO an Elder Scrolls game, that it's lore is not canon.
I play games, I don't watch people playing them.
DirtyDeeds765 wrote: »I don't think much of it at all because they're playing the game because it's an MMO. Not because its an online Elder Scrolls game. The people who play it because its an online Elder Scrolls game will be the ones that keep it flourishing.
@DirtyDeeds765
I bet the people who play this game because it's an Elder Scrolls game are the first people who will leave ESO once TES VI launches, because they don't like playing an MMO-RPG, because well, you know that's what ESO is, an MMO-RPG. ESO is NOT a single player game. I've never played previous TES games, but I'm still here, and I've been playing this game since 2015.
Elder Scrolls fans are part of this community, but to tell me that you're the only part that's keeping this game alive is completely false. I've seen many Elder Scrolls fans say don't even consider ESO an Elder Scrolls game, that it's lore is not canon.
karthrag_inak wrote: »"Content Creators" ? pbbbt.
Kiralyn2000 wrote: »karthrag_inak wrote: »"Content Creators" ? pbbbt.
^
I really don't get this whole modern 'streamer' culture. Let alone the importance people give to it.
"OMG, <name> isn't streaming <game> anymore! It must be a failing disaster!" /facepalm
I mean, it's both.
Even if you don't like the content, I'd reccomend checking out the video @FrankonPC (isthereno1else) posted today. It goes back and looks at the 2017, 2018, 2020, and 2021 letters from @ZOS_MattFiror . In these letters, Matt often uses the exact same verbiage as yesterday's letter when making promises that they still haven't made good on today. For me, more than half a decade of failure to fix specific issues is more than enough for me to make negative comments about the developers and the game.
Kiralyn2000 wrote: »karthrag_inak wrote: »"Content Creators" ? pbbbt.
^
I really don't get this whole modern 'streamer' culture. Let alone the importance people give to it.
"OMG, <name> isn't streaming <game> anymore! It must be a failing disaster!" /facepalm
Streamers are a reflection of the community. The number of people streaming and watching streams for a game are reflective of the number of people actually playing. Online games without an active streaming/content creation presence tend to be smaller, less relevant games.
Basically, the bigger and more active the game, the bigger and more active the streaming and content creation community. The fact that ESO has a dramatically shrinking content creation community is yet another indication of a shrinking and less engaged player population.
Let me put it this way. When I took a break from ESO, I didn't stop streaming. I just streamed other games instead. And when I consumed media, it was for those other games. The stream community isn't shrinking because the streamers don't want to stream anymore. It's because they are playing other games... and the viewers aren't avoiding twitch or YouTube. They're consuming content about other games.
It's all symptomatic of a bigger problem. The community is much, much less engaged with ESO compared to how it used to be. And even if your corner of the game isn't impacted, it still means fewer new players, fewer people purchasing the game and crown store items, and ultimately the game becomes less profitable. If that goes on for too long then it becomes a really bad trajectory. Better to see what is going on now and try to reverse course before it gets worse.
alternatelder wrote: »All of them do it for clicks. They always spew nonsense at this time of year. Kinda like the ridiculous "should you play ESO in '20,' 21, '22..."
Kiralyn2000 wrote: »karthrag_inak wrote: »"Content Creators" ? pbbbt.
^
I really don't get this whole modern 'streamer' culture. Let alone the importance people give to it.
"OMG, <name> isn't streaming <game> anymore! It must be a failing disaster!" /facepalm
Streamers are a reflection of the community. The number of people streaming and watching streams for a game are reflective of the number of people actually playing. Online games without an active streaming/content creation presence tend to be smaller, less relevant games.
Basically, the bigger and more active the game, the bigger and more active the streaming and content creation community. The fact that ESO has a dramatically shrinking content creation community is yet another indication of a shrinking and less engaged player population.
Let me put it this way. When I took a break from ESO, I didn't stop streaming. I just streamed other games instead. And when I consumed media, it was for those other games. The stream community isn't shrinking because the streamers don't want to stream anymore. It's because they are playing other games... and the viewers aren't avoiding twitch or YouTube. They're consuming content about other games.
It's all symptomatic of a bigger problem. The community is much, much less engaged with ESO compared to how it used to be. And even if your corner of the game isn't impacted, it still means fewer new players, fewer people purchasing the game and crown store items, and ultimately the game becomes less profitable. If that goes on for too long then it becomes a really bad trajectory. Better to see what is going on now and try to reverse course before it gets worse.
Kiralyn2000 wrote: »karthrag_inak wrote: »"Content Creators" ? pbbbt.
^
I really don't get this whole modern 'streamer' culture. Let alone the importance people give to it.
"OMG, <name> isn't streaming <game> anymore! It must be a failing disaster!" /facepalm
Streamers are a reflection of the community. The number of people streaming and watching streams for a game are reflective of the number of people actually playing. Online games without an active streaming/content creation presence tend to be smaller, less relevant games.
Basically, the bigger and more active the game, the bigger and more active the streaming and content creation community. The fact that ESO has a dramatically shrinking content creation community is yet another indication of a shrinking and less engaged player population.
Let me put it this way. When I took a break from ESO, I didn't stop streaming. I just streamed other games instead. And when I consumed media, it was for those other games. The stream community isn't shrinking because the streamers don't want to stream anymore. It's because they are playing other games... and the viewers aren't avoiding twitch or YouTube. They're consuming content about other games.
It's all symptomatic of a bigger problem. The community is much, much less engaged with ESO compared to how it used to be. And even if your corner of the game isn't impacted, it still means fewer new players, fewer people purchasing the game and crown store items, and ultimately the game becomes less profitable. If that goes on for too long then it becomes a really bad trajectory. Better to see what is going on now and try to reverse course before it gets worse.
Your first sentence, as bolded by me, refers only to a subset of the community. As such, every subsequent point you make relates only to that same subset. None of it relates to the whole community, or the overall state of the game.