Digits_foh
shitlord
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Apparently he knows what he likes. /shrugDigits said:But you"re not an internet mastermind, so what do you know?
They do deserve lots of respect for getting the industry to where it is, but they also deserve tons of blame for what happend ever since. I am not sure what outweighs the other. It"s the typical hero/goat thing.Ngruk said:Say what you want about Brad, or Smed, or any of them, but the fact remains that when you want to lay the cards on the table they are the only ones with hands to play. They"ve been there, and done that, from start to finish, which I don"t think any other person on these boards can claim. That in and of itself deserves something in the way of respect, to me anyway.
His point is that it is easy as hell to attack someone that has actually gone forward and done something, while you get to sit in the luxury of internet anonimity and give your monday morning quarter back opinion on shit you never have done or never will.Neric said:They do deserve lots of respect for getting the industry to where it is, but they also deserve tons of blame for what happend ever since. I am not sure what outweighs the other. It"s the typical hero/goat thing.
I guess if you feel like you have some bizarre right to grind an axe with them I could see acting like a wounded duck all the time. Its entertainment, if you don"t like their game or think they lie to you stop paying and playing them? Voting witih your money is the only way to have a say.Neric said:They do deserve lots of respect for getting the industry to where it is, but they also deserve tons of blame for what happend ever since. I am not sure what outweighs the other. It"s the typical hero/goat thing.
I"ll give them the respect they deserve in expanding the MMORPG genre into a marketable and profitable venture for other companies -- so we see more MMOROG"s being made. But what they are also responsible for is using the live patching process other than for what it should have been used for.Ngruk said:Say what you want about Brad, or Smed, or any of them, but the fact remains that when you want to lay the cards on the table they are the only ones with hands to play. They"ve been there, and done that, from start to finish, which I don"t think any other person on these boards can claim. That in and of itself deserves something in the way of respect, to me anyway.
Being your opinion it"s not for me to judge it as right or wrong, but we can agree to disagree. In the marketplace today, you have companies building games on the backs of the people that broke the ground almost a decade ago. It"s stunning to me that there is not more "don"t make the same mistake twice" mentality out there, but there just isn"t given what we"ve seen over the last few years and what we see incomming.Utnayan said:I"ll give them the respect they deserve in expanding the MMORPG genre into a marketable and profitable venture for other companies -- so we see more MMOROG"s being made. But what they are also responsible for is using the live patching process other than for what it should have been used for. .
If you want my opinion (not sure you are asking but I am offering), Brad makes games he thinks are cool and kick ass. I don"t have a problem with that. The fact that he"s been there and done that, start to finish, is pretty stinking unreal to me as I sit here at the bottom of that impossibly long staircase, and start to make my climb.Utnayan said:I disagree with McQuaid"s design philosophy, and that I can deal with - it"s an opinion. What got me mad before he stated it wouldn"t happen again with Vanguard (Time will tell now) were his business practices. Apples and oranges as far as I am concerned. .
It"s my belief that the patching setup was intended for use in a very different way when it was introduced, and has seen it"s current state evolve from issues and scenarios no one envisioned at the outset. When you are a trendsetter I think you deal with that more often than the people that follow you.Utnayan said:I"ll give credit where it is due in both regards. On one side, he showed that this market was a viable venture. On the other, he also showed himself and other publishers that live patching processes can be used for unethical gain.
Well, after reading what you said we agreed from what I could tell. You agreed with me that McQuaid and the like were responsible for bringing the genre to the marketplace, proving it could be profitable, and helping it get into mainstream. We also agreed that the live patching process is easily abused (And was/is) today.Ngruk said:Being your opinion it"s not for me to judge it as right or wrong, but we can agree to disagree.
I agree, I do not have a problem with that either. I may disagree with his design decisions, like Unibody for Vanguard which is the worst idea yet, and I disagree with how far he hasn"t come yet with this much development time -- but my problem is in the delivery, the hype, the PR, and some of the business decisions made which have really brought this genre into the ground just as fast as it put it up. I often wondered just how long it was going to take people to stop looking at this genre as a, "Well, I"ll buy this game in 6 months when they finish it after retail release". That"s horrible. And as long as that patching process is abused by publishers, it is going to continue.If you want my opinion (not sure you are asking but I am offering), Brad makes games he thinks are cool and kick ass. I don"t have a problem with that. The fact that he"s been there and done that, start to finish, is pretty stinking unreal to me as I sit here at the bottom of that impossibly long staircase, and start to make my climb.
Basically the Peter Molyneux effect. Hype, hype, and hype. Then the game comes, a lot of features cut but those features cut are not given the same press as the hype they were given years ago, and you end up with a very pissed off fanbase. In the case of Molyneux, I doubt his reputation will ever recover with customers. But this continues way too much in the MMORPG arena.I think what"s gotten designers in trouble (speaking as a customer now) is what they tell us, promise us and show us, and then what they actually deliver us seem to always end up looking and feeling very different.
I disagree. I tend to think they want to. If you read magazines you will see screenshot after screenshot with not a lot of merit to the actual discussion of the gameplay, or mechanics. It"s been pretty dumbed down to mainstream now in my opinion. You have a lot of hype and not a lot of substance. When you do have the opposite, it"s usually someone trying to sell the game on hype (Molyneux) without any expectation of ever coming through on it. Anyone can design a game on paper. When those people can translate it into a playable game, hit those same milestones, and come through for once, that is when they will be an accomplished designer.I also see the MMO space as one where people feel like they HAVE to let you guys in on what they are doing and HAVE to give the game magazines the "scoop" to be considered serious players, and I think that"s hurting more than it"s helping when all the feedback starts being factored in.
I think it"s intended set up was exactly like you say. But unfortunately, as time goes on, we saw it being used via every company as a way to shuttle out piss poor product out the door knowing they could patch it later while banking on the leveling curve. It failed every time. DAOC lacked post 35 itemization and RvR relics. EQ expansions lacked high end zones being completed, resulting in players hard work and effort usually met with a brick wall of no itemization or just flat out broken encounters.(What was worse though was they lied about it) AO was a joke. Star Wars Galaxies used the patching process to actually finish the retail game they already sold - and lied about it as well with many things (Jedi being in game for one, than watching even that patched in 6 months later)It"s my belief that the patching setup was intended for use in a very different way when it was introduced, and has seen it"s current state evolve from issues and scenarios no one envisioned at the outset. When you are a trendsetter I think you deal with that more often than the people that follow you.
plus WoW adding in the rest of their high-end dungeons post-release "for free".Utnayan said:...I think it"s intended set up was exactly like you say. But unfortunately, as time goes on, we saw it being used via every company as a way to shuttle out piss poor product out the door knowing they could patch it later while banking on the leveling curve. It failed every time. DAOC lacked post 35 itemization and RvR relics. EQ expansions lacked high end zones being completed, resulting in players hard work and effort usually met with a brick wall of no itemization or just flat out broken encounters.(What was worse though was they lied about it) AO was a joke. Star Wars Galaxies used the patching process to actually finish the retail game they already sold - and lied about it as well with many things (Jedi being in game for one, than watching even that patched in 6 months later)...
You are so biased towards WoW, it"s annoying. It"s a great game but is no way any better then EQ when it comes to what you just bitched about it couple post ago.Utnayan said:Whatever floats your boat. You feel that way, I don"t - but either way, in both our viewpoints, the patching process was abused.
I can"t think of any game that has done this more then WoW did. Siege Weapons , hero classes, etc etc. Hell Tigole in an interview about the game was hyping dungeons that wouldn"t be out for over a year, as if they would be in the game at release.Basically the Peter Molyneux effect. Hype, hype, and hype. Then the game comes, a lot of features cut but those features cut are not given the same press as the hype they were given years ago, and you end up with a very pissed off fanbase. In the case of Molyneux, I doubt his reputation will ever recover with customers. But this continues way too much in the MMORPG arena.
I am sick of this argument in which you, and others, fail to see the common sense right in front of you. Did Blizzard watch as players tried to figure out shit that didn"t exist for months on end while not telling them about it, and in fact, actually lie about it being in the game in the first place? No. They didn"t.Rythonn said:You are so biased towards WoW, it"s annoying. It"s a great game but is no way any better then EQ when it comes to what you just bitched about it couple post ago.
They said in the future.I can"t think of any game that has done this more then WoW did. Siege Weapons
They said in the future months before the game came out.hero classes
And I am sure he learned a valuable lesson in the fact that sometimes things are going to be forced on you to release when not done with content. He did it once, I doubt he will ever make the same mistake again. Peter Molyneux breathes and dies by making those mistakes over and over, because for him they are not mistakes, it is the way to generate revenue time and time again. If you need examples: Black and White, Fable, Black and White 2. Over and over the same thing.Tigole in an interview about the game was hyping dungeons that wouldn"t be out for over a year, as if they would be in the game at release.
So it"s an invalid comparison because there"s a possibility Blizzard may lie to their customers some time in the future?Asmadai said:Utnayan, Blizzard is a company that doesn"t have near the MMORPG experience under their belts as SoE has. Claiming that SoE is worse, merely based on the fact that Blizzard hasn"t had near thechancesto screw up is an invalid comparison.
Imagine if a new gaming system came out, for all sakes we"ll call it the FG1. Lets say the FG1 has a nice launch, with alot of following to it. Claiming that the company that creates the FG1 is better than Nintendo or Sony just because they had a nice first system launch wouldn"t really be fair would it?
But a nice launch doesn"t mean going out of your way to become unethical. So what you are saying is we will have to wait to see if Blizzard becomes unethical with this latest expansion and as time goes on?Asmadai said:Utnayan, Blizzard is a company that doesn"t have near the MMORPG experience under their belts as SoE has. Claiming that SoE is worse, merely based on the fact that Blizzard hasn"t had near thechancesto screw up is an invalid comparison.
Imagine if a new gaming system came out, for all sakes we"ll call it the FG1. Lets say the FG1 has a nice launch, with alot of following to it. Claiming that the company that creates the FG1 is better than Nintendo or Sony just because they had a nice first system launch wouldn"t really be fair would it?
Don"t get me wrong, i"m not saying we can"t judge the company. I"m just saying in it"s still far to early to compare it legitimately with SoE and the other MMO veterans. I"m thinking from the company standpoint here.Utnayan said:But a nice launch doesn"t mean going out of your way to become unethical. So what you are saying is we will have to wait to see if Blizzard becomes unethical with this latest expansion and as time goes on?