• @[email protected]
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    1276 months ago

    That’s why steam reviews are better with it being from actual people who aren’t scared of being blacklisted from future access. Even with joke reviews it’s still actually more informative. These review outlets call it review bombing, but I call it review awareness with it highlighting and bringing attention to things paid reviewers neglect and ignore.

    • @Nastybutler
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      216 months ago

      I don’t blame the reviewers for reviewing the product they were given. I blame Capcom for the bait and switch, and the editors who won’t edit the review to reflect the current reality

      • twelve20two
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        26 months ago

        I don’t even necessarily blame the devs, but I do blame the shareholders and people in administrative positions who pushed for this

    • @systemglitch
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      26 months ago

      Yeah man, “professional” reviewers are the biggest joke in gaming, I’ll trust the people who actually after about a h money they spent and the games they played. Genuine people tend to be truth worthy in this regard.

    • @Cold_Brew_Enema
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      -1446 months ago

      Spoilers: they shouldn’t. They actually reviewed the game and didn’t circlejerk about one completely optional feature.

      • @[email protected]
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        956 months ago

        I think the whole game should be reviewed and that includes the microtransactions. There’s a reason they add them after the reviews are in because they know people don’t like to be nickel and dimed in a game that costs 60 to 70 fucking dollars.

        • @Breezy
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          -546 months ago

          Microtransactions arent the game though. And none of whats for sale makes a bit of difference to the game. Not to mention everything you can buy is in the game already, it wasnt taken out or put behind a paywall.

          Do you also rate a game negatively if they have a battle pass? What about other capcom games like the resident evil remakes where you could buy the unlocked infinite weapons for 5 dollars? Do either take away from the actual game? No, no they do not.

          Its still not great, i agree, but it doesnt make a good game bad just because you think its scummy. I say this, but i do not have the game nor will i be getting it. Not because of people online crying about a nothing burger, but i just dont have a system strong enough to play it. If i did, i would because i loved the original game.

          • @[email protected]
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            6 months ago

            Yes because I’m not getting the game for free so things like performance and monetization impact my purchasing decisions and what price I’m willing to pay for it, which is what I rely on reviews for. I don’t see reviews as some art piece analysis. I don’t care only about what someone thinks about the gameplay when it comes to spending money.

          • @[email protected]
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            256 months ago

            I think they are the game as the developers can base their game around them (remember battlefront 2?) It’s a paid game, 70 dollars no less, and I’m sorry, but there is no justification for microtransactions.

            How come Baldur’s Gate 3 can be without microtransactions for example? It’s greed pure and simple. If they didn’t want you to buy them, and there weren’t people putting in ridiculous amounts of money in them they wouldn’t put them in.

        • @Cold_Brew_Enema
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          -696 months ago

          Hey wise guy. I have this amazing solution for that. It’s called not fucking buying them. People are losing their shit about this, yet helldivers 2 does the exact same thing and no one gives a shit.

          • @[email protected]
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            296 months ago

            Oh I’m sorry, I guess I should be grateful that a 70 dollar unoptimized game from a multi-million dollar company has microtransactions. I don’t care what mental gymnastics you come up with, they have no place in paid games.

            • Cethin
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              6 months ago

              I agree with the optimizations, but the MTX here really isn’t that bad by modern gaming standards. It’s “pay for convenience” where the convenience is getting some items a little faster. I believe all the MTX are available in game and not that hard to get.

              The port crystals are the worst offense, but I don’t think anyone knows how bad it is yet. I’ve tried to look up how many there are in game, and all I found is there’s a soft cap at 10, where any more isn’t useful, but I’m not actually certain that’s even true or some AI generated crap that pulled info from the first game that had the same system.

              The game does run fairly poorly though, which absolutely should get all the shit it’s getting.

              • @[email protected]
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                66 months ago

                Yeah, no. I don’t agree with those new modem standards because why in the world would you pay for glorified cheats? We used to get them for free! It’s corporate greed just wanting to extract every single cent out of you.

                • Cethin
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                  6 months ago

                  Sure, but are you consistent? Do you also rail against Helldivers 2, the Resident Evil Remakes, and all the rest? (I literally can’t think of more because I avoid almost everything like this.) I totally agree that it sucks, and it creates a situation where the games end up designed to be worse in order to sell the solution.

                  However, this game it looks to me like the director had pretty much as much control as is possible. The MTX are very minor and not all that useful. It seems to me (no personal experience yet) that the only people who will be buying these MTX are people with way too much money to spend, and it really won’t do much for them. In this situation I’m really not that bothered by them, despite being one of the strongest opponents of MTX generally. It’s just that if you decide you hate every game with MTX you can’t play modern games at all.

                  As an additional fun fact, Bethesda, creators of the infamous Horse Armor DLC, actually had an additional crystal-based teleport option DLC for their diegetic-only fast travel game Morrowind. This was in 2002 before this was really even heard of, but it was luckily free in this instance. Just a weird bit of synchronicity. https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Morrowind:Master_Index

            • @[email protected]
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              -66 months ago

              Every time I see someone complain about an unoptimized game I’m reminded people still use dog-shit computers or ‘gaming’ laptops.

              • @[email protected]
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                316 months ago

                How does someone else paying for them affect you at all in a SINGLE PLAYER GAME?

                By causing my single player game to be purposely designed to be worse so that they can “sell me the solution” through micro transactions.

              • @[email protected]
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                146 months ago

                I don’t care that it’s a single player game for fuck’s sake. I have a problem with free to play monetization in a paid game, not just this one any other game.

          • @WarlordSdocy
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            136 months ago

            Ah yes, cause not paying for them will magically make the game not be designed to try and push you to buy them.

      • @[email protected]
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        446 months ago

        except the version of the game they reviewed allegedly didn’t have the micro-transactions/paywalls

        • @okamiueru
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          76 months ago

          Did the review copies have the features you’d need to buy with microtransactions?

          • @SweatyFireBalls
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            136 months ago

            The MTX items are in game, the rumour that you can’t fast travel and stuff blatantly false.

            Capcom did some scummy shit, but the reason they(the press) didn’t know is because even now post release the game makes no mention of them.

            The limited travel, resurrections, and the currency for pawns were all in the first game and they all feel just as common in my experience.

            So fuck Capcom, but the game does deserve the reviews it got imo. However, they also deserve all the backlash they are getting, because they intentionally kept it quiet. They knew players would be upset. It’s gross.

        • @schmidtster
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          46 months ago

          The items are included in the game I thought, the microtransactions are just one method to obtain them.

        • @[email protected]
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          -36 months ago

          The released game doesn’t have paywalls either. I guess you’re incapable of understanding the issues you feel obliged to complain about.

        • @IsThisAnAI
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          -226 months ago

          The game didn’t change though. The items are still in game, have the same in game prices. Fundamentally it’s the same game.

      • @BleatingZombie
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        66 months ago

        Why would somebody only review a portion of the game you’re playing?

        It’s like reading a movie review where the author showed up 30 minutes late to the movie

        • @[email protected]
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          -46 months ago

          It’s literally not. It’s like reading a positive review for a movie and then going to see it and being outraged the theater is charging $14 for popcorn. No one is forcing you to buy the popcorn, and not buying it in no way affects your movie experience.

          Don’t you have more important things to be outraged about? Isn’t it exhausting hating everything all at once?

        • @frunch
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          36 months ago

          Can you suggest other sites that don’t come with that baggage but still curate worthwhile content?

  • Jaysyn
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    6 months ago

    Oh good, one more AAA I can auto-skip over.

    Did you know you can block publishers on Steam?

    • @[email protected]
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      166 months ago

      Refunded as soon as I saw… thanks for saving me $70, Dragon’s Dogshit II devs! Shame, game looks amazing, but nah.

    • @BleatingZombie
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      66 months ago

      I sure can’t. They just show back up with “Blocked” on the cover

      That’s not blocking them. That’s just modifying the cover art

      • @Baylahoo
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        66 months ago

        Completely agree. Block means don’t see in my mind.

  • @Retrograde
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    6 months ago

    ITT: Mental Gymnastics competition to see how well one can defend corporate greed

    • @[email protected]
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      356 months ago

      Nobody wants to admit they’ve been taken for a ride.

      Mark Twain said it best: “It’s easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled.”

      Useful idiot is the norm for this generation.

    • @systemglitch
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      36 months ago

      I’m years too late asking this because I get what it means, but what does ITT actually stand for?

    • @[email protected]
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      26 months ago

      I dislike the microtransactions as well, but there’s an insane amount of disinformation about them in these discussions.

      Almost all of the items are easily obtainable in the game by just playing, so there’s no gating of content behind the paywall. It being a single player game, there’s also no competitive advantage to be gained by buying them for real money (or inversely lost out on by not buying them)

      The whole discussion is blown widely out if proportion.

      • @[email protected]
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        86 months ago

        I view the mtx as basically paying for cheat codes. I’m not interested in using cheats but am opposed to companies trying to monetize them. It’s straight up mobile game level of BS in a PC game. Tbh though, if the store button wasn’t available in the main men, I wouldn’t even know the mtx exist.

    • @xenoclast
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      Lots was learned. They learned they can continue to move the goalposts simply forever it seems.

      Wait for the rage over this particular round to die down. Release a game with similar but slightly dialed back bullshit. Tell everyone how much better you are than them.

      Repeat until people pay $99 for the right to rent the game for $10 a month plus pay to win MTX.

      Sure DD2 is a corpse, but a new game will come growing from its corpse.

      Soon the poors won’t be able to play games anyway as that will be forbidden by their owners

      • BombOmOm
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        16 months ago

        Soon the poors won’t be able to play games anyway as that will be forbidden by their owners

        This is the nice thing about indy devs. Many of them don’t pull this shit and it is likely a large reason indy games have increasingly grown in popularity. AAA game is basically synonymous with microtranscations at this point.

    • @Zahille7
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      46 months ago

      I’m gonna paste a comment I left the other day pertaining to this:

      I will die on the hill of “Oblivion’s horse armor DLC was not the beginning of micro transactions”

      Because it wasn’t. There were micro transactions for games long before the hore armor thing. Also, horse armor was a one-time purchase for that mechanic.

      • @[email protected]
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        66 months ago

        I’m pretty sure the mtx for dragons dogma are all 1 time dlc bought on the steam page just like the horse Armour.

      • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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        36 months ago

        I will die on the hill of “Oblivion’s horse armor DLC was not the beginning of micro transactions”

        Because it wasn’t. There were micro transactions for games long before the hore armor thing.

        Such as? Are you saying you could pay a small amount for something in a game before this? Sure, it’s possible.

        Also, horse armor was a one-time purchase for that mechanic.

        Ok, and? As in it’s a small amount (micro) purchase for a thing?

        I’m not sure exactly what hill you’re dying on here. That there was a game somewhere that had buyable things for small amounts of money before Oblivion? Sure, there may have been. And?

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          Double dragon 3. You had to put coins into the arcade machine to literally buy items from an in-game store…

          Also, second life came out before Oblivion.

          • Cosmic Cleric
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            16 months ago

            Double dragon 3. You had to put coins into the arcade machine to literally buy items from an in-game store…

            Do you have any links for that? I love to read up on it, had never heard about it before today.

            • @[email protected]
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              6 months ago

              I thought it was going to be hard to find, since this was an arcade game from my childhood… But here’s one article from Neogaf.

              If you Google “Double dragon 3 arcade insert coins”, there are reddit articles, forums talking about this, and even the Wikipedia article talks about this being one of the first commercial games to have in-game micro transactions.

              "The U.S. version also features item shops where players could use additional credits to purchase in-game items such as weapons, a

              dditional moves and new playable characters in one of the earliest forms of microtransactions in a video game, although this system would end up being removed in the later-released Japanese version…"

              Also, not defending Bethesda’s practice, but Horse armor also wasn’t their first microtransaction for oblivion…

              They also had themes and stuff on the Xbox store, and literally told people that these types of things were going to be released.

              To be fair - I didn’t buy oblivion, a friend of mine had it for Xbox, and I went and sailed the kazaa seas and downloaded the base game + all the DLCs without having to pay micro$oft’s ransom. Only pointing out that we knew well before horse armor that gamers will open their wallets for this.

              • Cosmic Cleric
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                6 months ago

                Follow up to my last comment. That link is just user comments discussion about the arcade game, and not an actual publication article that describes the in-game store.

                We have to just assume that person posting that comment is knowledgeable and factual, and not astroturfing, etc.

                • @[email protected]
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                  06 months ago

                  And that the Wikipedia article discussing it is in fact wrong as well…

                  Sorry, there isn’t a lot of contemporaneous discussion referencing microtransactions on an arcade game that came out in the mid-90s… Back then, we paid up and complained about it to your friends or the person who had their coin on the table.

                  Basically, the gist is during game play, at specific breaks, you could have the opportunity to buy things like characters, combat abilities, infinit resources, etc.

                  Here you can even watch someone play the game. Miracle of the internet age, you can just open up a browser, type in “double dragon 3 arcade gameplay” and watch someone play the game and live the experience of being 10 years old in the 90s vicariously through someone else.

                  Or you could even download the PC port, or play it in emulation on your device of choice so you can truly see if those nasty first-hand accounts are telling the truth and you don’t have to question whether those people posting were knowledgeable, astroturfing, etc.

              • Cosmic Cleric
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                6 months ago

                Honestly, I was just looking for a link so I can read up on it, not challenging you about it.

                I actually tried Googling your comment sentence but it just gave me the game and nothing about this feature you were talking about.

                I’m going to go take a look at that article you linked for me. Appreciate it.

          • TSG_Asmodeus (he, him)
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            36 months ago

            Ok, I still don’t understand the ‘hill you’re dying on here.’ I don’t think anyone truly believed that Oblivion was the First Video Game Ever ™ with Microtransactions in it, I’m not sure that was the point, I’m fairly certain the point was how ludicrous it was to force people to pay for Horse Armour in their First Person game. It set off a series of discussions about whether or not this should be the way forward, people acquiesced, and it became standard.

            Thus: “From the comments here I can see we learned nothing from Horse Armour.”

            Because people are still defending predatory practices in the industry with ‘yeah but you can just grind to get…’ or ‘but you don’t have to…’

      • @A_Very_Big_Fan
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        6 months ago

        Also, horse armor was a one-time purchase for that mechanic.

        It wasn’t even a mechanic, though. The armor literally did nothing, it was a cosmetic.

        • @[email protected]
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          36 months ago

          No it was armour. Technically it just buffed your horse’s HP rather than being true armour, but it did something.

          There was also a new vendor who sold it and a little quest to enable it.

          • @Zahille7
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            16 months ago

            And it was all of $2.50 if I remember correctly.

          • @A_Very_Big_Fan
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            16 months ago

            Ah, you’re right I guess I was misremembering

      • @[email protected]
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        26 months ago

        Agreed, it’s really not what people think of when they really think of microtransactions. Horse armour was really just mediocre & overpriced DLC.

  • @UnculturedSwine
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    326 months ago

    “Jeez Capcom, leave some evil for the rest of us!” - Satan probably

  • @leave_it_blank
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    306 months ago

    “[…]these micotransactions grant more frequent access to features many gamers deem essential for any action RPG. This includes fast travel and character customisation.”

    Wait, what? Seriously devs?

    • @[email protected]
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      -196 months ago

      the key phrase there being ‘more frequent’. the fast travel and character customization are all in the game and have a more in-universe integration. the game systems are supposed to be more immersive than just click the map and fast travel. you typically either take a cart from town to town or warp using a stone that gets used up.

      I like it the way it is, makes leaving town to quest and adventure have another layer of strategy. If someone wants to bypass that strategy layer with money then so be it. I certainly would prefer that it be a mod rather than a MTX, and will definitely not be buying any regardless.

      • @[email protected]
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        196 months ago

        Nah, this is inherently scummy behavior.

        Want to enforce a particular tone and strategic layer to a game by limiting fast travel based on a consumable? Cool. Just don’t make that a consumable that can be purchased with real dollars.

      • @[email protected]
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        116 months ago

        I like it the way it is, makes leaving town to quest and adventure have another layer of strategy. If someone wants to bypass that strategy layer with money then so be it. I certainly would prefer that it be a mod rather than a MTX, and will definitely not be buying any regardless.

        This has been solved for a long time. If you want to force people to leave the town to quests and adventure just stick to Morrowind style fast travel where fast travel doesn’t go everywhere. If you want people to be able to fast travel everywhere then let them fast travel everywhere. If people can fast travel everywhere but don’t want to fast travel everywhere then it’s a single player game, they’re free to make up their own rules on how they want to play.

        There’s no justifiable reason to slap a price tag on fast travel and that’s the issue most people have. The fact that it was removed from review builds shows that even the devs know how fucking shitty it is. No need to defend a shitty practice.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          There’s also no justifiable reason the same people bitching about Dragon’s Dogma 2 MTX said fucking nothing about the RE4 remakes literal pay2win MTX. What was the RE4 remakes review count?

          Oh, right, 97% positive with almost 90k reviews. (*On Steam)

          This is not a new phenomenon. Capcom has been monetizing their games like this since DMC4. Capcom also makes really good games and is one of the few AAA devs that still delivers.

          You people acting like this is a slippery slope are just really, really slow.

      • @Maggoty
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        26 months ago

        No. You do not need to limit fast travel for immersion. That doesn’t even make sense.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          A lot of people, myself included, do so in Skyrim. It is a completely different experience and way more immersive indeed.

          • @Maggoty
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            56 months ago

            That’s fine. But limiting it is not required for immersion. That’s all I’m saying here. If you want to do it then great. Forcing people to do in the name of immersion, and then selling fast travel for real money is an obvious bait and switch.

            • @[email protected]
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              26 months ago

              Sure, that’s definitely a shit move. And it is not requiered, just pointing out that not removing fast travel in a game (especially if you are familiar with the game, and it has fast travel by default) makes you see that game in another light. Sometimes it is a shit experience, sometimes a great experience, but aleays a journey.

              Definitely recommend it!

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          That’s exactly right.

          Most games won’t even let you warp to places you haven’t been yet. Fucking bullshit.

            • @[email protected]
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              6 months ago

              Sounds like excuses.

              “Noo, there’s actually this totally reasonable made up reason you can’t just go where tf the developers want you to~! You have to let them waste your time; it’s artistic!”

              [edit] I was hoping the first guy would respond. I’m mocking him, to be clear. :p

          • @Maggoty
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            26 months ago

            And you’re the queen of England?

    • themeatbridge
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      186 months ago

      Because they’re old-tymey. Everything was sepia tinted and muddy back then, and they didn’t have fancy dyes or expensive rendering software to make many polygons.

  • @[email protected]
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    166 months ago

    Gran Turismo 7 pulled the same shit. I’m still pissed about that one. Plus the lack of single player content basically means I haven’t even played the game since shortly after launch. The grind without mtx is crazy boring.

  • @IsThisAnAI
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    116 months ago

    It’s not going to change much.

    It’s crazy dumb they created the controversy but the game is fully complete and excellent.

    It’s insane they didn’t see this blowing up in their faces 🤦‍♂️.

    • @BleatingZombie
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      16 months ago

      Clearly you haven’t looked at steam. People can’t make it past the character creator due to the constant crashing

      It’s anything BUT fully complete

      • @IsThisAnAI
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        -16 months ago

        Lololol I’m like 50 hours in no issue

    • @[email protected]
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      -16 months ago

      They didn’t see it, because the last game had exactly the same micro transactions and quite literally nobody seems to remember this.

  • @time_lord
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    106 months ago

    We tried this already - getting ethics in game journalism.

    It didn’t work so well.

    • @[email protected]
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      136 months ago

      Can’t tell if you’re joking or not, but gamergate was absolutely not about “ethics in game journalism.”

        • @[email protected]
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          46 months ago

          “It’s about ethics in gaming journalism” was the common refrain for Gamergate proponents.

      • @time_lord
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        05 months ago

        Not joking. It absolutely was about ethics, at first. The initial kickoff was the boyfriend accusing the girl (Zoë Quinn?) of sleeping with someone else for a better review. That’s ethics in a nutshell. I don’t think that anyone really cared about the game, or who was involved, but rather that the state of the industry was such that you could accuse a well known game reviewer of being unethical, and it was more believable than not.

        The fact is, reviewers had already sold their souls and a AAA game get anything less than a 90%. Had reviewers had better ethics, probably no one would have believed the boyfriend, and the entire story would have been a nothing-burger.

        Of course it went off the rails after that, the fact that the boyfriend was lying didn’t help, but for a brief moment it looked like there might actually be game news/review industry reform. It was a glorious 24 or so hours.

  • stankmut
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    -346 months ago

    They say in the article that reviewers were told about the microtransactions. Then they mention that one reviewer said he didn’t read the notes that were sent by Capcom. Why would this reviewer need to go back and rescore the game? If he enjoyed it without knowing about the microtransactions, they clearly don’t matter to the gameplay.

      • stankmut
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        -336 months ago

        That’s my point. Reviewers gave it great scores when there weren’t any microtransactions and they haven’t changed anything in the game to make those microtransactions important. You can play the game the exact same way the reviewers did by just ignoring them.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          ~~You misunderstand, the mtx were essentially unlocked in the reviewers versions, not simply missing features. ~~

          Edit: apparently my last edit didn’t get submitted somehow, but I’m sorry about being misinformed and unintentionally spreading it. What I was told was wrong as it was spin that I read of what did happen: the those features were unlocked in the reviews… because they’re in the game, this was conveniently left out. Then I misread that as the games otherwise not having those features.

          • @[email protected]
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            66 months ago

            Care to provide sources? I had a press preview of the game before release and nothing changed in my version, so I REALLY wonder where you get that information from.

          • @[email protected]
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            26 months ago

            You have no clue what the fuck you’re talking about, spreading misinfo. You’re part of the problem with the modern internet, rat.

          • stankmut
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            6 months ago

            I haven’t seen anything that has said that. I couldn’t find that in the article either.

            Edit: I don’t care about the downvotes, but surely one of you could’ve replied with a link showing me where it says that reviewers had the mtx unlocked for them while reviewing.

            • @[email protected]
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              6 months ago

              Yea, Lemmy is fucking insufferable with this game. If the complaints were valid I’d understand (1 save file, performance). But this senseless parrotted incessant whinging about mtx for items that are easily obtained in game is just so weird to me. They want to be mad. The game is incredibly fun and I’m having a blast playing it. Never even once have I felt the need to even look at the mtx page because everything is just that readily available.

  • @[email protected]
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    6 months ago

    Mixed feelings about that - it sounds like you can still access those features so I don’t think it really affects the base game at all. From what I remember about the first game, you had to be sparing on the waystones to start with, and it required a bit of work to get the item necessary to redo your character - so not much has really changed there. On the other hand, adding these microtransactions in the first place is a stupid idea and the publishers are shooting themselves in the foot by adding them. Should that really change the reviews of the base game though?

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      Having limited access to a resource to then hook you on microtransactions is from mobile game design. It’s literally a freemium mechanic being put into an already upscaled price game.

      It’s one of the most abusive and addictive ways to develop a game, and you want to portray that positively.

      I fucking hate gamers. We’ve been having this conversation since the horse Armor DLC for Oblivion yet here we fucking are.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 months ago

        Oh I don’t want to portray it positively. I agree it’s shit. It just seemed to me that it’s possible (personally at least) to play the game and ignore the microtransactions. But no doubt that’s not the case for everyone

      • @[email protected]
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        -96 months ago

        Except having limited access to a resource is from the original game. There’s this lie being sold online that it was an intentional decision for DD2 to try and sell more microtransactions, but limited fast travel is a hallmark of the original Dragon’s Dogma. People are so quick to blind themselves to hatred that they haven’t noticed that Capcom has added completely pointless microtransactions to every one of their games for at least the past 5 years. You can drag them through the coals if you want to over that, and it’s as fair a reason to boycott Capcom games as any, but it’s not a reason to start going after games journalists.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          Except having limited access to a resource is from the original game.

          The original game that ultimately saw success in its “Dark Arisen” release that had an eternal ferrystone.

          Don’t go trying to redefine history here, I played both copies of the original.

          There’s this lie being sold online that it was an intentional decision for DD2 to try and sell more microtransactions, but limited fast travel is a hallmark of the original Dragon’s Dogma.

          There is no lie in the complaints. Ferrystones are not a limited resource in Dragons Dogma 2. You just have to pay microtransactions for it. You are lying about the game to defend it. To me, this level of denial comes off as coping.

          I want you to admit that ferrystones are not a limited resource in Dark Arisen and same with Dragons dogma 2. And I want you to admit the differences in how they are offered to the player.

          Or go lie to somebody else.

          • @[email protected]
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            6 months ago

            If what I read is correct, there is a quest involving a spinx in late game that offers an eternal ferrystone. Now maybe I’ve been lied to, but it sounds pretty reasonable and would track with what was added to Dark Arisen. If you really, desperately, for whatever reason want to skip playing like 80% of the game and spend $30 to fast travel everywhere, I guess you could spend it on ferrystones? Nobody should do that though, it completely breaks the flow and atmosphere of the game, and they are meant to be a limited resource in the early game of both Dragon’s Dogma 1 and 2. You can hate that decision all you want, but don’t try to distort facts to fit your own rage. All the microtransactions are pointless and unnecessary.

            Edit: I looked back through the Sphinx again, killing it grants you an eternal wakestone. So currently no way to get infinite fast travel, but yes to infinite lives.

            • @[email protected]
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              6 months ago

              Sounds like you want to change topics from your whole lies bit for some reason? Weird. Changing your defense from it being lies and a limited resource while not admitting the predatory nature of this game design. I dont care to argue your new bad faith points as you did not take the last stance fairly. I can’t stand predatory microtransactions. The arrogance of people who don’t care about it invading the game just allow further shit like this to fester.

              I guess if we’re changing topics, we can focus on the predatory character customization microtransaction. They locked any new saves or character creation to limit people to a microtransaction. That’s pretty fucked up too.

              Or we can go into Capcoms’ recent attempts to take down mods from their old games. https://readwrite.com/capcom-backtracks-quickly-and-removes-drm-after-players-rebel/

              There are plenty of problematic things to hit on here.

              Have you tried to turn a circle in the main city on low settings?

              • @[email protected]
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                6 months ago

                Doesn’t like that topic is being changed -> changes topic.

                Also, you talk about eternal ferrystones, he talks about eternal ferrystones.

                Carefull with the Cheeto-dust there my man.

                Also, can you tell me exactly where the ‘new save or character creation’ microtransaction is? I can’t seem to find it.

                Also, character customisation is easily done by buying an item in game for a negligible amount of gold.

                Your whole reply reeks of misinfo and bad faith acting. You’re spreading misinfo. Woof.

                I get it, you hate MTX, we all do. But there is no point in spreading idiocy.

    • @eatCasserole
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      306 months ago

      I kinda think we should go right off and bomb all the reviews, with the hope that it teaches devs to stop doing stuff like this.

    • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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      216 months ago

      Dark patterns are malicious and antagonistic against the end user. The microtransactions add arsenic to the tea.

    • @Yeahboy92
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      -306 months ago

      From what I’ve read, it seems to be a compromise to me. I imagine the dev team didn’t want to do it but compromised with the publisher and in reality they probably don’t want you to buy the dlc, as it defeats some of the design decisions. There’s a good pcmag article detailing the dlc and how impactful it is. My guess is that the general opinion of any reviewers would remain the same regardless (with the context of the pcmag article).

      • @[email protected]
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        -216 months ago

        I scrolled through the mtx and… there is literally nothing in there that anyone should ever buy. Exception for the character redesign item, but if this is like first game, you can redesign your character between playthroughs.

        I feel like there’s some kinda argument here between the director and whatever suit wanted mtx. That stuff in the store is literally pointless to buy. RC? People will rent your pawn, that’s how you get it. Wakestones? Gold in game.

        Only thing I’d consider buying would be the eternal ferrystone, but that defeats the flow of the game, and they aren’t selling it.

        • @proper
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          26 months ago

          its the stuff from the deluxe edition. And it isn’t “buy currency whenever” mtx. just the deluxe stuff if you didn’t order deluxe. I got the base game and have already accumulated all this stuff.

        • @[email protected]
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          -56 months ago

          I think if people knew that you’d eventually unlock infinite fast travel in end-game anyway, maybe people would be less insane? but realistically the whiniest bitching is coming from people who just want to be mad, so trying to add context won’t help.

          It’s stupid as hell because the game has legitimate issues with performance and some baffling choices, but everyone’s upset with Capcom for…doing the same thing they’ve done for 5 years without any complaint.

          • @[email protected]
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            -36 months ago

            Now imagine people would actually play the game and realize that you actually don’t want to FT because it is honestly fun to explore.

            But that would require them to actually care about the game… lol.

            • @[email protected]
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              16 months ago

              No kidding. I’m now onto the second kingdom, and have acquired like 11 ferrystones. I’ve used maybe one all game just for pacing reasons. Why would I want to fast travel and miss out on the griffin attacks? Every journey becomes a grand adventure with like several stories of heroic valor, and they’re interspersed with little downtimes where you get to have pawn chatter.