Common over the past few weeks? Fuck off. It was plenty common long before ME3. And on my side of the gaming world, you fucking saw it like you wouldn't believe. I'm a valvE fan. I don't believe that everything they do is a godsend, but I do believe that a lot of what they do is pretty right because, oh my god! I can imagine myself in their shoes! Madness!Theparanoidgamer said:You see this ["Entitled"] thrown around constantly by all variety of gaming sites, and its become especially common over the last few weeks as various media outlets attempt to report on the recent controversies involving Bioware and Mass Effect 3.
The interesting thing here is that I agree absolutely with your evaluation of the problem, as in the bit I quoted, but you call this gamers acting entitled, and I call it a lack of entitlement. We have the same view with a slight change in wording, but probably picked opposite sides in the pollElamdri said:But gamers are a weird bunch. They'd rather pay money for something they perceive to be inadequate and then complain about it's inadequacies afterwards rather than avoid purchasing it in the first place.
I always wish that there were more games for me to enjoy. I've always been very selective in what I choose to play, but it certainly hasn't been my experience that the quantity of decent games has changed over the years. It's always been a small number.Sotanaht said:While great in theory, it becomes a problem in practice when there are no games (or not enough) that ARE worth the money. It is at this point that we must demand better games or cease playing them entirely, which to me is a wholly unacceptable option. It is not merely the consumers right, but their responsibility to demand the products that they wish to purchase.Chemical Alia said:I don't play games that I don't like or don't think are worth my money. It's worked great for years.
This x10000. At the end of the day this is a business. They speak in dollar bills, not thank you cards.krellen said:My gratitude is the $60 I give them for the game. Beyond that, I owe them Jack Shit.Phlakes said:For the love of god, every name you see in the credits of a game is a person just like you, be a little fucking grateful once in a while.
If I give them $60 for a product, and that product is not the product they sold (it is not as described in previews, advertisements, or packaging), I have every legal right - and the moral obligation - to complain about it. I have been cheated, and I'll be damned if I'll just lay down and take it.
That's not entitlement. That's the foundation of consumer capitalism. It doesn't work any other way.
You linked to Erik Kain's personal Blog on Forbes, these were not actual published articles that reflect the writ of Forbes at large.Frehls said:Forbes is now the most respectable gaming news outlet.
Meh. I'll just repost Tycho's response to this assertion.Dinnerman said:I don't feel like anybody complaining about ME3's ending has a valid argument. Sure, you can think poorly of it, or you could think well of it, and there's nothing wrong with that. Art is subjective. But to demand that Bioware change it? Grow the hell up. It's THEIR game. Their work of art. They can do whatever they like with the story, and if you don't like it, then you don't like it. Just because it doesn't happen to sync up with your personal vision of how the series should've ended means nothing.
And to anybody banging on about how the ending 'ruined the series' for them, just can it. It's about the journey, not the destination.
So, yeah. As much as I respect your "I disagree with you, so you need to shut up" perspective on life, I can't say I think you've got a leg to stand on. But from the tone of your post, I don't forsee you being open to having your mind changed.There?s a countercharge now, in response to anger about the endings, that describes Bioware?s output as sacrosanct in some way - beyond criticism. This is fundamentally batshit, or as noted ?speculative fiction? author Harlan Ellison might say, bugfuck. I?m fine with the ending, which to my mind started as soon as I ran the executable - the whole game is denouement - but I revolt against the idea of Authorial Divinity almost at the molecular level.
You see, that's one of the reason I think gamers are entitled. Not because we complain when we're not happy about something (at least not entirely because of that). But because we seem to think that we should be able to complain about the way that companies handle their product even though we'll still buy it up happily. Why? Because gamers seem to think that companies will and should listen even when we continue to throw money at them. That's not to say you can't complain about something in the game (such as the ending or gameplay). More that you can't really complain about the way the companies handle things like day-1 DLC if you're still going to buy the game, the DLC, and pretty much anything else they release. That just sends the messages they need to keep doing that kind of thing.WoW Killer said:No. Gamers are not acting entitled enough. They are spending money on a product that they are dissatisfied with. Gamers need to understand that they are the consumers, the consumers are always right, and that the way to change an industry is to vote with your wallet. Shame on anybody who complained about a product but still bought it.
Bioware is not a 15 yr old girl writing dark poetry in her dairy. They are a company, producing a product. They are charging 60+ of your hard earned dollars for this product, and if the consumer is not satisfied with this product they have a right to complain, because there's nothing else consumers (especially PC gamers, they can't even throw their copy to Gamestop) can do about it. EA/Bioware are not people, they are not your friend, they are not trying to do you any favors. They are trying to suck as much money out of you as humanly possible, and do not need anyone on the internet to stick up for them.Dinnerman said:It's THEIR game. Their work of art.
Gotta love Total Biscuit. I completely agree with him, and with the articles in the OP.dreadedcandiru99 said:Total Biscuit on entitlement (starts at 10:49): "Stop thinking you can't make demands. This is how capitalism works." [http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=0sYp-eggD1Q#t=649s]Frehls said:Basically what we have here are refutations of the "entitlement" bullshit gaming media and devs/publishers are slinging around like howling monkeys.
And complain all you want. But where the entitlement comes in is demanding they change things to suit your opinions.krellen said:My gratitude is the $60 I give them for the game. Beyond that, I owe them Jack Shit.Phlakes said:For the love of god, every name you see in the credits of a game is a person just like you, be a little fucking grateful once in a while.
If I give them $60 for a product, and that product is not the product they sold (it is not as described in previews, advertisements, or packaging), I have every legal right - and the moral obligation - to complain about it. I have been cheated, and I'll be damned if I'll just lay down and take it.
That's not entitlement. That's the foundation of consumer capitalism. It doesn't work any other way.