Posted January 30, 2016
hummer010: The primary difference between "pre-order" and "in development" is that you get 14 days to experience the "in development" product to decide if you actually want it. If you don't like it, you get your money back. That's a lot more to base a purchase decision on than a "pre-order"
I no longer pre-order things, buy early access/in development games, or crowdfund games, but I have before.
I don't quite understand why people are so against this. If you don't like early access/in development, then don't buy them. If you don't buy them, then this has a total of zero impact on you. If you do like buying early access/in development games, then do buy them here rather than on steam. Here they're DRM free.
lazydog: Thanks for the info, but I am far from convinced. I no longer pre-order things, buy early access/in development games, or crowdfund games, but I have before.
I don't quite understand why people are so against this. If you don't like early access/in development, then don't buy them. If you don't buy them, then this has a total of zero impact on you. If you do like buying early access/in development games, then do buy them here rather than on steam. Here they're DRM free.
You are correct, it will have zero impact on me because I simply will not entertain it.
I would like to see these developers put into place 14 days in their end user agreements and even if they did it wouldn't mean shit.
By buying into these products you are simply hurting yourself as a consumer.
With early access people are getting more than a product, people are paying and receiving an experience. They ideally get to be part of something, seeing its faults, making suggestions that could shape the final product, and in the end say they had some small part in the process. These buyers may actually be getting the very thing they paid money for because that's the experience they were asking for. And, unlike pre-orders, they have access to something, and can get some immediate return on their purchase.
In theory it can be used to better the product or create a product that wouldn't exist otherwise.I don't personally get it, and I do think there are times when "in development" becomes an excuse for cutting and running and other shady business. However, Just because it's not perfect and has an element of risk doesn't mean it has no intrinsic worth or that customers can't get get something of value off the buy in.
I think it's a wise idea for consumers to be watching out for companies abusing the system, but I don't think the system should be shut down just because it can be abused. Abuse is a possibility with most things, and reacting by throwing out something that can have value because it doesn't always have value is sticky business.
I guess it doesn't bother me much because people are getting something out of it, and because there are way bigger issues with this industry that early access.
Post edited January 30, 2016 by gooberking