If reception to Baldur’s Gate says anything, it’s that people hate microtransactions in their AAA games.

  • @inclementimmigrant
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    291 year ago

    The only thing AAA publishers and developers will learn from this is they’ll look at the sales numbers from Baldur’s Gate, then look at their profits from their psychologicaly fine tuned monitized games and come to the conclusion that the majority of gamers are suckers and will continue to bleed the gaming community dry as they clamour for the next CoD, FIFA, and Diablo.

  • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶
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    181 year ago

    Author got burned bad in the comments:

    8 hours ago

    “Instead of getting more accepting of microtransactions these days because they’ve become so normalized, I’m moving the opposite direction. I genuinely resent Diablo 4 for sinking so, so much work into its $15-30 armor sets in the store when they could have been farmable in the game, and in-game sets are already starting to fall behind in the seasonal model.”

    You clearly don’t resent it that much, considering you gave Diablo 4 a 9/10.

    • Madison_rogue
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      1 year ago

      It’s not a burn; it’s a poorly constructed comment made out of context. The author’s criticism on Diablo 4 is based within the context of Baldur’s Gate 3’s release. The review for D4 was written before BG3 was released.

    • Eggyhead
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      41 year ago

      I would be happy if MTX were just a default penalty rule on all game review scores. MTX: Yes. Score -2.

  • @PoopingCough
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    151 year ago

    And like when games are fully finished on release

  • style99
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    111 year ago

    Too bad game devs don’t care. They make more farming rich morons using micros and FOMO than they could dream of making, otherwise.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Hot take: mtx are a good thing as long as they don’t cause a significant imbalance in gameplay. There’s a reason the price of a AAA game has remained roughly $60 for nearly two decades in spite of increasing development costs and inflation.

      People who purchase in game add-ons subsidize those who don’t.

  • CIWS-30
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    51 year ago

    We also like games that ask players for feedback, then take it and test it in the game and improve the game with it if it works. As opposed to recycling the same ubisoft tower climbing + shallow collectible fetch quest-a-thon for the 100th time while wondering why people are getting bored and not buying the sequels.

  • Goronmon
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    21 year ago

    If the success of Baldur’s Gate 3 shows that gamers don’t like micro-transactions, does that mean games that sell well with micro-transactions is prove that gamers actually like them?

    Just want to be clear on what the rules are for the logic here.

    • Fogle
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      01 year ago

      Well there’s selling well, and being the best rated game of all time and universally acclaimed

  • ⠀Q⠀
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    21 year ago

    I hate microtransactions.

    I also love round based 5E DnD combat and bought BG after new campaigns for Solasta (Crown of the Magister) came to an end. Still a great game with huge 3rd party campaigns due to it’s author toolkit/map maker.

  • @Protoknuckles
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    21 year ago

    Please?! Can that please be the lesson everyone learns!?

  • Justagamer
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    21 year ago

    Hasbro executives breathing heavy through their nose reading your sentence while they look at their D&D plans for the next 5 years.

  • Syo
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    11 year ago

    The lesson to take away is that AAA != Good game. Never pre order. Play demo, beta. Only play if you’re time is respected.

    Artificially designed grinds, limitations, time gates should be auto no buy.