And how did they know it would be controversial? Because the people who gave it free advertising with "this is wrong! #stophatred2014!" are as predictable as the click-bait websites that immediately picked up on it for easy ad revenue.Lieju said:It's ultimately the product of the designers setting out to make a game they knew would draw in controversy and then market this as offensive.
Hatred exists because the developers took advantage of an environment made by people who could make it flourish by giving it free publicity through fake internet outrage.
To be clear, I don't think it's necessary to "blame" anyone for this. Hatred is a valid if crude game with subject matter that's not new to anyone familiar with Postal and it's ilk. And I don't buy that it isn't at least a little tongue-in-cheek, I can't keep a straight face during the dialogue in the trailer, I can't believe that isn't intentional.Lieju said:One of those groups is giving the devs publicity, one money. Just like planned by the devs.
But blaming just one group of this seems a bit weird, especially when in the end they're not the ones actually giving money to the devs.