Posted March 25, 2011
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13506_3-20046148-17.html?tag=cnetRiver
But nickel and dime-ing customers with DLC and micro-payments that adds up to far more than $60 is apparently okay.
I suppose there is nothing new here, but seriously have they forgotten what game demos and review sites (w/ pro & user reviews) are for? I guess I'd rather pay $60 for a complete game with an option to pay for mods/pack that really change the basic game experience (like a full expansion pack or high-quality user-made mod), but which clearly aren't things that should've been included at launch and were withheld so they could charge you later. I realize that sometimes this is a matter of degree the amount of content where it becomes worth paying for it or is clearly not stuff they just withheld. But the extremes are pretty obvious - like that terrible MS video promoting buying a virtual gun for a fps as though this is a good thing. Ah well ... sorry for the small rant, I'm probably preaching mostly to the choir here. :/
EDIT: BTW I actually have nothing really against casual gaming or even DLC really in general, I suppose it's just acting as though "free-to-play" with huge amounts of DLC that you continually spend money on is somehow a more fair, honest, or consumer-friendly approach to gaming is ... hypocrisy at its finest.
But nickel and dime-ing customers with DLC and micro-payments that adds up to far more than $60 is apparently okay.
I suppose there is nothing new here, but seriously have they forgotten what game demos and review sites (w/ pro & user reviews) are for? I guess I'd rather pay $60 for a complete game with an option to pay for mods/pack that really change the basic game experience (like a full expansion pack or high-quality user-made mod), but which clearly aren't things that should've been included at launch and were withheld so they could charge you later. I realize that sometimes this is a matter of degree the amount of content where it becomes worth paying for it or is clearly not stuff they just withheld. But the extremes are pretty obvious - like that terrible MS video promoting buying a virtual gun for a fps as though this is a good thing. Ah well ... sorry for the small rant, I'm probably preaching mostly to the choir here. :/
EDIT: BTW I actually have nothing really against casual gaming or even DLC really in general, I suppose it's just acting as though "free-to-play" with huge amounts of DLC that you continually spend money on is somehow a more fair, honest, or consumer-friendly approach to gaming is ... hypocrisy at its finest.
Post edited March 25, 2011 by crazy_dave