He hasn't posted one since December? Shamus why did you abandon us?!?!?! As far as the topic of the article, I agree with Shamus and would prefer to limit my comment to being about his other work here.ekkaman said:Well said mate. Your one of the only reasons I still come to this site.
BTW Stolen Pixels????????????
Marketing isn't art. Nobody ever said that the games in question needed to be touched, but their marketing is completely out of touch with guess who... us. If we're the target audience they are marketing to and we simultaneously say that we find the campaigns to be the worst possible way to sell something to us, in what way is that censorship? You are seriously fighting for the sanctity of advertising here man, and campaigns that sell in nothing more than stifling controversy.Sober Thal said:'abominable and offensive marketing campaigns'
I weep for our future.
Censor them, yeah, that's a great fucking idea guys.
We cannot sink so low as to have any childish humor in our mature games.
You are the devil if you dare decide to have fun, as an adult, in a childish way.
Shame on us all.
That's not the kind of publicity we need with the whole fake Christians thing. There is such a thing as bad publicity. We don't need more people yelling controversy and getting people to do so does not help us. They just wanted attention and made us all look immature by doing so. While I don't think someone should be put to death for trying to draw Muhammad I do believe that we should be courteous enough to do so. It's a part of their belief system that depictions of a prophet lead to idolization which pulls away from the worship of God. I can respect that view and I think it is in bad taste to do something like that.Ne1butme said:I wanted to say this on the Extra Credits thread, but it got too long. I didn't really have a problem with the fake Christian protesters at E3. I actually thought it was rather clever. They weren't mocking Christians. They were mocking the people who protest sight-unseen. Like the people who protested Last Temptation of Christ or Dogma. They were mocking "religious" bullies like Westboro Baptist. They were mocking the people who called for death to anyone that might draw a cartoon that features someone that might look like Mohamed. (btw, since we haven't officially seen any paintings or drawings of Mohamed in more than 1000 years, who knows what he actually looked like. Hell, he might have looked like the modern depiction of Jesus. And won't that be awkward...)
The other stuff EA did... pretty stupid.
Also, speaking of crass advertising - I wonder why no one complained about Bethesda's name your child after a character in SkyRim contest? Remember when Acclaim did the exact same thing years ago with Turok? A whole lot of people complained that.
When it's one of the Big Five Players, then yes it bloody well can.dogstile said:So what, its a stupid thing to have an advertising campaign that works?
EA's marketing team are controversial and it sells games, lots of games. It might annoy some people but its one company with the silly adverts. It'd be a problem if it was gaming as a whole that did it, but then it wouldn't be controversial then would it?
One company isn't going to damage an entire industry, so please, everyone. Stop overreacting.
When we're busy fending off people who accuse us of selling violent content to minors, then YES. THE MARKETING WAS A VERY BAD IDEA. The LAST thing we need to give the opposition right now is ammunition over a low, patronizing gag.Sober Thal said:'abominable and offensive marketing campaigns'
I weep for our future.
Censor them, yeah, that's a great fucking idea guys.
We cannot sink so low as to have any childish humor in our advertisements of mature games.
You are the devil if you dare decide to have fun, as an adult, in a childish way, in a commercial.
Shame on us all.
Some of them were. I could even stand by the protest as some kind of parody, but the overall push has been received negatively. Ads like the "nobody pukes on me" were overshadowed by the "your mother will hate this!" Not every campaign has to be tame and artsy like Mirror's Edge, but their most recent batch has felt like mockery.Sober Thal said:I edited my first post, but I still feel like a few of the ads were all in good fun. I don't see a need to raise a red flag. I see that some do, and I wish for nothing but the best for people doing what they think needs being done.Wolfenbarg said:Marketing isn't art. Nobody ever said that the games in question needed to be touched, but their marketing is completely out of touch with guess who... us. If we're the target audience they are marketing to and we simultaneously say that we find the campaigns to be the worst possible way to sell something to us, in what way is that censorship? You are seriously fighting for the sanctity of advertising here man, and campaigns that sell in nothing more than stifling controversy.Sober Thal said:'abominable and offensive marketing campaigns'
I weep for our future.
Censor them, yeah, that's a great fucking idea guys.
We cannot sink so low as to have any childish humor in our mature games.
You are the devil if you dare decide to have fun, as an adult, in a childish way.
Shame on us all.
It's this kind of bullshit I really hate. Either the companies do as I want or they shouldn't do it at all. The best example comes from team liquid forum "elitists" and esports. They rather have them dead if they don't develop as they see fit.ayvee said:Right, it's trying to get rid of ridiculous marketing and improve our image that does that.Cenequus said:Like really bitching as the article it's pretty much pointless. Makes me sad to see instead of support for something half decent,as EA is doing,we throw stones at it and complain. And then we wonder why the others see us like a savage,sociopath comunity.
After Six Days in Fallujah and now after these guys caved, I've told myself that if there is another game that hits the same controversial button with the media, and they produce it, I'll buy it just to support that company.2) In Medal of Honor, there was an outcry when it was learned that players could play as the Taliban. EA caved, and removed the Taliban label from the game.
"The Struggle Against Whatever" = Banning All Violent Video Games in America. That's quite the "whatever".Sober Thal said:Sorry all of us are bringing down video games in the struggle against whatever, but you won't make me feel bad for laughing and enjoying these ads.lacktheknack said:When we're busy fending off people who accuse us of selling violent content to minors, then YES. THE MARKETING WAS A VERY BAD IDEA. The LAST thing we need to give the opposition right now is ammunition over a low, patronizing gag.Sober Thal said:'abominable and offensive marketing campaigns'
I weep for our future.
Censor them, yeah, that's a great fucking idea guys.
We cannot sink so low as to have any childish humor in our advertisements of mature games.
You are the devil if you dare decide to have fun, as an adult, in a childish way, in a commercial.
Shame on us all.
There's a sizable portion of gamers who feel insecure about the subject of art and games. As in, they feel like their more visceral and sometimes guilty pleasures are in some way slighted or diminished whenever the question of artistic merit and gaming gets raised regardless of whether or not highbrow and lowbrow entertainment can coexist in the same medium peacefully (if anybody else in the thread is wondering: they can). It pretty much boils a case of "If you don't like what I like, you're wrong and I hate you forever."IvoryTowerGamer said:Never understood why people get this way over EC. They usually mention that they have no problem with non-artistic games; they would just rather see more art injected into the medium.
Bingo. And don't think it can't happen here. Even if we're not talking bans, look at Australia and Left 4 Dead if nothing else.lacktheknack said:"The Struggle Against Whatever" = Banning All Violent Video Games in America. That's quite the "whatever".
Do have to point out that particular dishonor should actually go to Valve, who did online activation, registering to a specific account and no reselling a good three years before Bioshock did. The name of this DRM? Steam.Remember that EA was one of the early adopters of online activation. (They weren't the first, though. That honor goes to 2kGames for BioShock.)
You dont think that prolonged negative campaigning that EA is currently using wont have an adverse affect? You'd be surprised what can happen if enough people complain.Blitzwing said:Yea and maybe pigs will learn how to fly.008Zulu said:If these kinds of articles gain momentum and more sites write up things like this, the EA will have no choice but to see just how badly they are treating everyone.
And you'd be surprised as to what misconceptions people have about bad press. Heck, the most samey and unimaginative games ever to exist have gotten blasted several times over for pandering to the easiest audiences, you think people care? Hell no! So long as the game can work decently enough and fulfills that one thing you're after, they couldn't care less and sales are affected sooner by the *quantity* rather than the *quality* of the press.008Zulu said:You dont think that prolonged negative campaigning that EA is currently using wont have an adverse affect? You'd be surprised what can happen if enough people complain.Blitzwing said:Yea and maybe pigs will learn how to fly.008Zulu said:If these kinds of articles gain momentum and more sites write up things like this, the EA will have no choice but to see just how badly they are treating everyone.
Exactly what I was going to point out.Delusibeta said:Do have to point out that particular dishonor should actually go to Valve, who did online activation, registering to a specific account and no reselling a good three years before Bioshock did. The name of this DRM? Steam.Remember that EA was one of the early adopters of online activation. (They weren't the first, though. That honor goes to 2kGames for BioShock.)
Heh, maybe you're right.Dorian Cornelius Jasper said:It pretty much boils a case of "If you don't like what I like, you're wrong and I hate you forever."IvoryTowerGamer said:Never understood why people get this way over EC. They usually mention that they have no problem with non-artistic games; they would just rather see more art injected into the medium.