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One result of this Civ3 debacle...

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  • #16
    Come to Poppa!!!

    Originally posted by yin26
    First, I agree.

    Second, I think, however, these companies are just doing what the market will bear: Release a playable but buggy product and let 'the real world' do the beta testing for you. If sales suck, abandon the game. If sales are good, look at the beta test results your paying public is crawling over itself to give you and release some patches that don't require too many programming hours to implement. Leave the good stuff for an X-pack or sequel that approaches what the first release *should* have been. More $$$. Effectively, two or three or more products are sold for what the fans 'would like to have seen' in one.

    While I think the words 'work in progress' as they apply to released games should be taken out back and shot, the average gamer is perhaps a step below a crack whore, so good luck getting them to change their relationships with their pimps.

    Yin, you're singing my song!!! It's all about what the "crack addict" market will bear.

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    • #17
      Originally posted by yin26

      You might be surprised at how many of those issues they knew about before shipping. Perhaps all of them. This was a deadline issue. I'm sure the testers did a fine job (as you say, those are obvious mistakes).
      You have a point, Yin. The one that shone through with me was the scroll issue. Where Dan M. admitted that the cause was re-using SMAC code. (But almost seemed to say that it as an excuse.)

      I bet there were twice as many problems and the fixed what they could off a long list, while leaving some, finishing off play balance, creating new last minute wrong things, etc.

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      • #18
        I'm sorry, but I don't see how Firaxis has violated any consumer protection laws. I agree with Yin's comments about gaming companies abusing a far too forgiving public, but saying that this behavior is a crime is ludicrous. Gamers should fight back against the release of bug-ridden games, not depend on some assinine notion of what consumer protection laws actually protect the public from. No court in America would consider bugs in a computer game to be a legitimate problem.
        KH FOR OWNER!
        ASHER FOR CEO!!
        GUYNEMER FOR OT MOD!!!

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        • #19
          GP: Yep. It's the demand side causing most of these problems. There is the occasional company that bites the dust, however, for being incompetent ... and I always revel it. It does seem that the gaming industry is going through some major restructuring toward a few corporate publishing houses running the show. And on the supply side, that means less power in the hands of people who makes the games and more power to the stock holder and quarterly financials. So put the crack whore and the pimp daddy in the same room: What do you expect? A mess is what I expect, and a mess is what I see most of the time.

          This 'November patch' that has been hinted at by Firaxis is, perhaps, a good sign. I'm really hoping they were already on top of most or all these obvious issues. In fact, my guess is that was part of the release strategy because this gave them time to have a patch ready before the big Christmas sales as the only thing that could have killed Civ3 during Christmas is some killer bug that got let loose in the wild. With an October release, they could have recovered from it before the holidays.

          "Releasing buggy games NOW is better than releasing buggy games right at Christmas. And the hardcore crack heads will take any version they can get, so we'll be sitting pretty with the casual crowd come Christmas morning and the first patch."

          Damn. I might have run the meeting the same way.
          I've been on these boards for a long time and I still don't know what to think when it comes to you -- FrantzX, December 21, 2001

          "Yin": Your friendly, neighborhood negative cosmic force.

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          • #20
            They may have violated consumer protection laws with the Limited Edition of the game by not included waht was advertised on the box, but releasing a slightly buggy game is not something that can be sued for. If the game was completly non functional we could sue but that is not the case. Oh well

            Dustin

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            • #21
              Originally posted by Alexander's Horse


              Did I say anything about multiplayer?

              The game is buggy - imagine if the music industry released CD's with tracks missing or the drummer not playing on track 5 etc. How long do you think they'd get away with it? Its the long suffering PC game consumers who are letting them do it now but that won't last forever.
              Oy vei! "Long suffering PC game consumers" pretty much sums up the shabbiness of this post. If you're suffering so darn much, why don't you stop playing games and end your suffering? Because you're not actually suffering, you're whining. You don't like a computer game? Don't buy it! Simple as that. You've got no right to demand high quality from Firaxis, just as they have no right to demand you buy anything they make. If they give it to you, great! High quality certainly insures higher profits. But, consumer protection laws? Complete nonsense! Next time Firaxis employees break your legs for not buying Civ 3, that's when you'll need protection laws. But not before.

              Think of this version of Civ 3 as a beta test. Rather than play the beta for free and get the full version for $50, you pay $50 for the beta and get the full version free in a couple months (in the form of a patch).
              I swear, by my life and my love of it...

              ...don't you hate pants?

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              • #22
                you pay $50 for the beta and get the full version free in a couple months (in the form of a patch).
                Well this, of course, is part of the angst.
                1) Pay $50 for a beta. O.K. Fine. I'm waiting for the patches.
                2) First two patches are free, but don't really change 'deep-seated' gameplay issues. Just stuff like faster game turns, etc., which is nice, so things are looking up.
                3) Infogrames announces that futures patches will be rolled out along with the X-pack, that will also include MP and a better editor. Now, wait: My investment is more like $80 to get the complete game ... and people who didn't already buy the $50 beta can't play the X-pack because it's not a stand-alone product.
                4)Those who feel cheated by this because they faithfully stuck by Firaxis during the beta testing (I mean post-release beta testing) feel that something is definitely wrong here.
                5)Those who have been waiting for the complete package must now wait another X months before the Gold Edition is released.

                Of course, going back to my previous comment, since most gamers are crack heads, there will simply be moaning and groaning along with the 'Where do I sign?' stampede to the computer stores.

                In the end, I'm getting too old to care so much about all this. I was given the game for free to test ... I tested it and am fully aware that this is a game of 'potential.' But since I like the potential I see, I am hanging in and 'risking' some time and money. Frankly, the most interesting cards have yet to be played in this situation, so I'm watching with curiosity.
                Last edited by yin26; November 15, 2001, 03:21.
                I've been on these boards for a long time and I still don't know what to think when it comes to you -- FrantzX, December 21, 2001

                "Yin": Your friendly, neighborhood negative cosmic force.

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                • #23
                  Originally posted by yin26
                  There is the occasional company that bites the dust, however, for being incompetent ... and I always revel it.
                  There are some that bite the dust for not shipping on time also. (Sacrificing profit for quality.)

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                  • #24
                    Yes, and those tend to be places with incompetent leadership. Black and White is a great example. PM took complete responsibility for the release of that game, and it's clear to me that even another year in the over would not have saved it. The man was just not competent enough to realize his vision in any kind of timely manner.

                    Tough business, eh?
                    I've been on these boards for a long time and I still don't know what to think when it comes to you -- FrantzX, December 21, 2001

                    "Yin": Your friendly, neighborhood negative cosmic force.

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                    • #25
                      Business IS tough. But fascinating...

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                      • #26
                        One problem I am concerned about is the lack of incentive to patch. They already have the gamer's money ... what serious make-me-do-something-I-don't-want-to-do incentive is there to make a patch that they get no money for?

                        Even if they release with bugs, with all good intention of patching them ... once that pressure is off it must all seem much less important.

                        Yes, I know there is some incentive in the form of "reputation" and all. However it is in no way the same kind of must-do incentive, in the form of money, that drives capitalism.
                        Good = Love, Love = Good
                        Evil = Hate, Hate = Evil

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                        • #27
                          I guess we should all thankgod that Blizzard exist.

                          Maybe we should also all curse them because they don't make civ games
                          If the voices in my head paid rent, I'd be a very rich man

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                          • #28
                            Originally posted by IncreduloDriver


                            You don't like a computer game? Don't buy it! Simple as that.
                            Without a demo, how are you supposed to know if you like a game before you buy it?

                            And before anyone says "read Apolyton", we've had everything on this board from "it's the best game ever" to "it's so flawed i'm never playing civ again"!

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                            • #29
                              Originally posted by Drake Tungsten
                              I'm sorry, but I don't see how Firaxis has violated any consumer protection laws. I agree with Yin's comments about gaming companies abusing a far too forgiving public, but saying that this behavior is a crime is ludicrous. Gamers should fight back against the release of bug-ridden games, not depend on some assinine notion of what consumer protection laws actually protect the public from. No court in America would consider bugs in a computer game to be a legitimate problem.
                              Thank goodness I live in the UK where consumers have rights against faulty products then
                              To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection.
                              H.Poincaré

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                              • #30
                                In fact I like it that a patch is going to be released......
                                and an x-pack after that......

                                imagine civ3 would've been released perfectly.......
                                then we would've nothing to wait for and to look forwards to

                                I can hardly wait until the patch has been released, and MP !
                                In Holland we have a saying that says somethiing like "Having the thing is the end of all fun" and I think that's very right.

                                Looking forwards to something is about as exiting as playing it the first time. (civ in fact keeps being fun, even if you already have it )

                                In fact I can barely wait for civ5 uh I mean civ4 (3.5 ? 2.8 ? yin ? how are we going to name that release ?)

                                CyberShy

                                Ps. Yin, is this civ3 or civ 2.5 ?
                                Formerly known as "CyberShy"
                                Carpe Diem tamen Memento Mori

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