EA's New Scrabble App Causes Kerfuffle
A stat wipe and a new dictionary cause uproar in the Scrabble community.
Scrabble, like most popular board games, has a social presence online. As of May, board game manufacturer Mattel has turned the keys of its popular [a href=https://www.facebook.com/Scrabble]Scrabble[/a] Facebook app to EA, and the transition has many fans upset. When EA updated the game, they added new languages, a custom board feature, and an ad-free version. They also wiped everyone's stats, removed manual match-making and timer mode, changed the way the pages auto-refresh, and even changed the in-game dictionary to the blasphemous Collins edition, according to the [a href=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-22905191]BBC[/a].
As the official Facebook page fills up with complaints, player hate is spilling out into groups [a href=https://www.facebook.com/groups/492649110806594/]like this[/a]. As Scrabble player Helen Hawkins told the BBC, "Who wants to play it in six languages? I've been playing for over four years, I had 5,000 games on my statistics, I'd won 71% of them, I had my best scores recorded - and now it's all lost."
According to Mattel, it's all part of the move. "As part of the transition [to EA Mobile], we were unable to carry over ongoing games and statistics, the timer mode and the manual match-making function. The new version will have the same robust statistics moving forward."
"We are sorry we weren't able to please everybody," a Mattel Spokeswoman said. "We produce the board game but we're not experts in electronics."
Source: [a href=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-22905191]BBC[/a]
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A stat wipe and a new dictionary cause uproar in the Scrabble community.
Scrabble, like most popular board games, has a social presence online. As of May, board game manufacturer Mattel has turned the keys of its popular [a href=https://www.facebook.com/Scrabble]Scrabble[/a] Facebook app to EA, and the transition has many fans upset. When EA updated the game, they added new languages, a custom board feature, and an ad-free version. They also wiped everyone's stats, removed manual match-making and timer mode, changed the way the pages auto-refresh, and even changed the in-game dictionary to the blasphemous Collins edition, according to the [a href=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-22905191]BBC[/a].
As the official Facebook page fills up with complaints, player hate is spilling out into groups [a href=https://www.facebook.com/groups/492649110806594/]like this[/a]. As Scrabble player Helen Hawkins told the BBC, "Who wants to play it in six languages? I've been playing for over four years, I had 5,000 games on my statistics, I'd won 71% of them, I had my best scores recorded - and now it's all lost."
According to Mattel, it's all part of the move. "As part of the transition [to EA Mobile], we were unable to carry over ongoing games and statistics, the timer mode and the manual match-making function. The new version will have the same robust statistics moving forward."
"We are sorry we weren't able to please everybody," a Mattel Spokeswoman said. "We produce the board game but we're not experts in electronics."
Source: [a href=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-22905191]BBC[/a]
Permalink