jklinders said:
Every dev says they listen to fan feedback. Bioware did as well. They at their own expense did the Ec.
Yes they did, but not out of the goodness of their hearts, they realised that the fan outcry was hurting thier future profit potential and deemed that the resources to make the EC were worth it to claw back some of their estranged fans. I would say they were reasonably successful in this.
It didn't satisfy everyone? Boo hoo. Seriously.
Of course it didn't satisfy everyone, who really expected it too?
They did more with the EC then most would have bothered to but because they did not buy into the fanbases pet conspiracy theory they were not listening? Any other pieces of flawed logic you want to toss in for good measure.
It comes down to this. There are three possible stances about the state of the fanbase post-EC, the majority are OK with it, the majority are not OK with it, and we don't know who's in the majority. Bioware claimed that the first option was true, when any data available to the public suggested the second option was the truth. Now if the data available is inaccurate, the default position becomes "we don't know", as if the polls are worthless there is no data to support either of the other two options.
But Bioware were talking like they had proof that they were right, so either they had data they refused to share (I've already explained why I think this would be a bad idea), or they're talking complete BS.
Bioware screwed up with the original ending. I feel that if the EC was released first we would not be bickering about this.
Yeah, I agree with this bit.
They fixed by explaining themselves while keeping their integrity intact. Yet this is somehow violating their integrity.
I don't really want to get into an argument about artisitc integrity, they never seem to end well. But from my perspective, if the EC was just "clarification" of the original ending, it shows how badly the original was mangled, given the complete tonal shift in the EC (from "soI just killed everyone" to "hey, we actually did win").
Frankly the IT theory folks confuse the heck out of me.
True enough, never liked the theorey personally. Not only are you pretty much told flat out during the game that Sheperd isn't indoctrinated, if true, the bait and switch ending (without any resolution) would have been an almighty slap in the face to the audience. It's a telling sign of how badly the original ending goofed that IT got as popoular as it did.