Posted January 18, 2017
After watching a video on YT about the gaming industry, i am seriously considering following the author's advice and simply contacting a game publisher about a major issue that is bothering me and stopping me from buying their games(or getting bought games refunded), rather than simply silently voting with my wallet by not buying their games until they change their policy. However, i would prefer to have at least a somewhat decent chance of not getting my mail/letter end up in a bin that never gets answered or looked at, so i'd like some advice on what venue of contact i should use exactly.
The issue is UPlay. I won't go into details about my reasons to hate it. Just suffice that i refuse to install it, will never register an account on it and will not buy any games that demand it(or let the ones that i bought without realizing their requirement, before Steam's refund policy kicked in simply gather dust unplayed). And some of those games are flat out awesome games that i would buy in a heartbeat if they would just let themselves be validated through Steam alone without requiring a second, highly intrusive distribution client.
Obviously i stand the best chance of getting an answer on UBISoft's insistence on using that client for their most succesful titles(one without all the real reasons being burried under PR hot air like "we sincerely believe that this client enriches your gaming experience more than any other storefront client could do") if i ask someone who is a few levels above your typical entry level consumer relations rep. And using a publisher's forum is more likely to start a trolling war than get a decent answer (yes i know this is a forum too, but the GoG community tends to be more caring about games than the typical toxic "official" game forums for a major IP).
So who should i contact within the company, and how? Anyone have any experience with getting a major game publisher to answer a serious question about a major distribution policy, or even contribute to making them reconsider it? I really would like to play the AC series beyond the first part, or FCBD or watch dogs, but i never will unless they withdraw the "must validate through UPlay even if you bought and installed the game through Steam" requirement. If they would consider selling the titles through GoG, that would be even better!
The issue is UPlay. I won't go into details about my reasons to hate it. Just suffice that i refuse to install it, will never register an account on it and will not buy any games that demand it(or let the ones that i bought without realizing their requirement, before Steam's refund policy kicked in simply gather dust unplayed). And some of those games are flat out awesome games that i would buy in a heartbeat if they would just let themselves be validated through Steam alone without requiring a second, highly intrusive distribution client.
Obviously i stand the best chance of getting an answer on UBISoft's insistence on using that client for their most succesful titles(one without all the real reasons being burried under PR hot air like "we sincerely believe that this client enriches your gaming experience more than any other storefront client could do") if i ask someone who is a few levels above your typical entry level consumer relations rep. And using a publisher's forum is more likely to start a trolling war than get a decent answer (yes i know this is a forum too, but the GoG community tends to be more caring about games than the typical toxic "official" game forums for a major IP).
So who should i contact within the company, and how? Anyone have any experience with getting a major game publisher to answer a serious question about a major distribution policy, or even contribute to making them reconsider it? I really would like to play the AC series beyond the first part, or FCBD or watch dogs, but i never will unless they withdraw the "must validate through UPlay even if you bought and installed the game through Steam" requirement. If they would consider selling the titles through GoG, that would be even better!