Well well well, if it isn’t my old friend: day 1 performance issues.

  • @ctobrien84
    link
    English
    -31 year ago

    It’s kind of bullshit to call people impatient if they buy a game when the publisher says the game is ready for release. That’s on the punisher, not the consumer. While everyone is fine with pushing the blame on the consumer for buying games at release, I’m over here shaking my fist at the publisher. I get the whole idea of being upset that purchasing on release is perpetuating poor practices, but don’t be sloppy with your aim. This is squarely on the publisher.

    • @Linuto
      link
      English
      301 year ago

      The old adage is relevant here:

      Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.

    • @kadu
      link
      English
      271 year ago

      Yes, the publisher is to blame.

      But it will keep happening regardless - so you can either keep falling for it and screaming it’s not your fault, or wise up and start having a bit more patience and buying games later.

    • @Phegan
      link
      English
      121 year ago

      It’s on the publisher the first time. It’s on you if you keep buying them.

    • @isles
      link
      English
      9
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      You might think that fist shaking will make a publisher change. Look at the history of buggy game releases. It’s extensive. Look at all that fist shaking.

      Publishers are run by people. People respond to incentives. Business is incentivized to gain dollars.

      If, for example, no one gave publishers dollars until trusted reviewers verified no bugs / issues, the publishers would be incentivized to release polished products. (note, trusted reviewers may not be the ideal solution, but hopefully illustrates the concept)

    • @chakan2
      link
      English
      91 year ago

      It’s kind of bullshit to call people impatient if they buy a game when the publisher says the game is ready for release.

      At this point…you’re contributing to the cycle of buggy releases. Yes, the responsible gamers absolutely can call out the dumbasses who still pre-order games.

    • R0cket_M00se
      link
      English
      81 year ago

      This your first day in the real world? Devs have been releasing games in this state since like 2013 (not including the gaming collapse of the 80’s) regularly.

      If you still trust developers to claim a game is ready and then release it as such, then you’re gullible and will fall for anything.

      You want the system fixed?

      1. DONT PREORDER

      2. Wait for actual reviews, not the “I played the tutorial and then made this video so I could beat the other YouTubers, 7/10.” Two weeks or so gives the passionate reviewers to play the whole game and give their opinion.

      3. (This one is where you morons keep fucking up) If the game isn’t up to your standards… DONT FUCKING BUY IT! Buying shitty products tells the devs and publishers that you’re willing to spend money on a heap of garbage! You know what they’ll do next time? That’s right! More garbage!

      Stop trying to blame the system because you’re a shitty consumer who will hand over their money for a promise and no second thought.

      Stop. Buying. The. Crap. Products.

      If this was housing or medical I’d be calling for regulation, this is video games. A luxury good. Just don’t pay money for garbage and they’ll be forced to make better products to get our money.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      41 year ago

      Even if customer isn’t to be blamed as you claim being voluntarily ignorant despite past trends at the very least makes them an idiot. And the type to get swindled by everyone since they take everything at face value.