• Limonene@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Beta testers should get a discount, or even get paid, in exchange for writing good bug reports. These people are fools for paying extra for earlier access to a bug fest.

    I would never pre-order a game. That just makes it harder to refund it if it sucks.

    • Wrufieotnak
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      3 months ago

      The original Minecraft had the right idea in my eyes. Cheap in alpha, because there is less stuff. A bit more when it reached beta state and another increase when it reached full release state.

      Because you played an inferior version with less content and supported the development, you got a discount. No idea why people would pay extra to be the beta tester though.

      • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        I was going to pipe in that I paid for Minecraft in infdev, so pre-alpha. But now that you mention it, it was dirt cheap, and they had already had several free access weekends in indev, so I had a pretty good idea of what I was getting myself into

      • theneverfox@pawb.social
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        3 months ago

        But then someone will see a spreadsheet and calculate the “missed” revenue, and whoever made that decision either gets replaced or given strict orders next time

        Even if they manage to dig their heels in, it will come up again and again. It looks like a money shaped hole, and so organizationally they’ll keep coming back to it

        It is a great way to make games, many indie games do this. A team can do this, but a corporation can’t - subtlety doesn’t fit on a spreadsheet

        • Wrufieotnak
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          3 months ago

          Oh for sure, I don’t blame the companies for doing it. I’m blaming the customers for being stupid enough to fall for it. Again. And again. And again.

          • theneverfox@pawb.social
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            3 months ago

            I’m not sure customers are falling for it - this is why voting with your wallet doesn’t work. People rage against games that launch in an unfinished state, particularly when they’re full price. Steam reviews often incorporate price point - statements like “don’t buy this at full price” or “this might have been worth it at $20, but this is not a $70 game” come up a lot

            Sales for AAA games are way down, we just saw the biggest failure in gaming history. Casual reading of steam reviews show people clearly have different expectations based on price, Twitter sometimes explodes with anger at specific moves (like Helldivers requiring PSN) and they back off (temporarily), but they always go back to the bullshit

            The feedback mechanism of “voting with your wallet” doesn’t communicate this message. Metrics show purchases, refunds, and active users… That’s what fits on a spreadsheet. They see a game failing, but that doesn’t mean they’ve understood why

            AAA studios don’t want to understand what makes a game succeed or fail - they just want a formula to min-max ROI. They want strong numbers at launch, but they also want to minimize production costs, and they treat costs (like developers) as line items - they learn the wrong lessons, because they aren’t concerned with the creative part of game design. They want to be the next Madden or assassin’s creed, they want to figure out how to get players to pay $70 + micro transactions (or better yet a subscription too), but they also want their employees to be interchangeable cogs they can push to burn out then replace

            AAA gaming is dying from this, but it’s an oligarchy at this point - large corporations are unable to understand nuance or truly innovate - these are things people do when they have autonomy. They don’t do team building or R&D anymore - that’s a gamble that sometimes pays off big, but not in a quarter or two. They aquire then kill off what made the team work in the first place - any individual can tell you that’s a recipe for failure, but by nature they keep the decision making far removed from the people actually doing the work

  • PushButton@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    If there were a bunch of people knocking at your door, willing to pay you to work for you, wouldn’t you take the money?

    Of course you will. Companies will also.

    The real faulty actors here are the innocent people that don’t understand the gimmick.

    I’ve been there, I can’t really blame them… I am no better…

    • RvTV95XBeo@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      Imagine you run a restaurant, and a handful of people offer to pay to wash your dishes for you. Great deal right? But then you notice they start posting reviews of your food on Yelp, but only from the kitchen:

      “Steak from the fridge was unseasoned and undercooked - 0/5”

      “Chow mein was dry and stuck to the plate like it was sitting on someone else’s table for an hour - 1/5”

      “By the time the soda got here, it was flat and fries the waitress dropped off were cold and soggy”

      At what point do you decide maybe this isn’t actually in your best interest in the long run? How much do these rubes need to pay you in order to put up with their complications?

      • PushButton@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I don’t care; people are flocking in to buy my junk anyway.

        I even have my fan club of my franchise defending my restaurant for free on the Reddit and all…

        At the end, the reviews are balancing pretty well, but my financial balance is very green thou.

        And do you know what’s funny? My competitors are also doing the same! People believe that’s “how it works” and just accept it.

        I am telling you, you should do the same! My shareholders are really pleased with the results…

  • Deello@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    Fingers crossed that they get an in game rearview mirror charm

  • fckreddit@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    Companies: Pay us extra to play early.

    Also companies: Sorry that bugs and server issues are preventing you to play early. Here, some useless worthless junk as apology. But, at least we got more money from you than we deserve, sucker.

      • RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I am not from the EU, so I wouldn’t participate in the EUs regulatory stuff. But I do follow that movement closely and keep track of updates to it.

      • DarkThoughts@fedia.io
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        3 months ago

        Pretty much when it was only France who passed the threshold, or almost did, can’t remember exactly but it was some weeks ago.