Exterminas said:
WittyInfidel said:
That would imply that yelling "Fire!" is doing something to help the situation. It doens't. It just speards panic and keeps people from leaving the room and putting out the flames.
If somebody said "Hey, room's on fire" I surely wouldn't sit around to watch. Yelling fire lets people know there's something wrong, notifies people who can help take care of it, and gets innocents to safety. Thus, situation can be resolved. Not "keeping people from leaving the room".
Exterminas said:
Probably the only solution would be to not buy these games anymore, but that certainly can't be it, because that would kill these genres.
It would not kill the genre, it would force a sub-par developer to adapt or die. The genre, as a whole, would continue. it would just be minus one Obsidian/Bethesda/other shoddy developer.
Exterminas said:
If anything the solution would be to buy the buggy games on day one, BECAUSE they are buggy. That would pump some money into these underdog-genres and may be would enable them to stand their ground against pushy publishers.
This would not fix the issue. If this were to fix the problem, Neverwinter Nights 2 would have been cleaner, KOTOR 2 would have shined, and Fallout; New Vegas would have nary a glitch. By purchasing and supporting product, you do not further progress and change. Instead, it helps support the status-quo. And the staus-quo for the current season is shoddy, broken product.
How much more money does Obsidan/Bethesda need to quit releasing broken games? By my count, they have released multiple games, which has brought in some serious money, yet their product is still sub-par.
Bugs have become expected from Bethesda and Obsidian. The problem does not lay with lack of funding or not enough other resources. It instead has to do with a shameful work ethic and a willingness to release something that they know is unacceptable.
If you, assuming you have a job, performed in such a way at you place of employment, how long do you think that you would continue to have a job.
And that's what this is for these people. A job they do in order to make money.
Question is, why are they still employed?
Because we keep buying unacceptable product from them, knowing full well it's unacceptable from the beginning.
The problem is not just them. The problem in us, as well. In our willingness to buy that which we know is broken.
We all, developer and customer alike, know that this is wrong. Why are we not making this right?
Exterminas said:
Aaahhh... Solutions that start with "If everybody would..."
Well, I can't think of anybody else better suited to the task. Mr. Nobody currently is working on the project, and he's doing a pretty shoddy job.