DOTA 2's system is lamentably worthless. While the idea of a low priority queue is commendable, the amount of time spent in it is relatively low, and the amount of reports you get per week (I believe it's 3) isn't enough enough to detail all the assholes from a single match, let alone a week's worth of play. Thus a relatively high level of toxicity is allowed to flourish.Zakarath said:Dota 2 has a decent system where you get stuck in a separate 'low-priority' matchmaking for a while, so if you rack up too many reports or abandons, you have to spend some time stuck in a hellish land of trolls and leavers. Not to say there aren't some flaws (getting reported by a band of trolls, getting punished if you suffer an internet/power outage) but it seems better than most alternatives.
Also according to Riot bad player queues and low priority just lead to cyclical bad behavior. A hellish troll nightmare from which there is no escape.BloatedGuppy said:DOTA 2's system is lamentably worthless. While the idea of a low priority queue is commendable, the amount of time spent in it is relatively low, and the amount of reports you get per week (I believe it's 3) isn't enough enough to detail all the assholes from a single match, let alone a week's worth of play. Thus a relatively high level of toxicity is allowed to flourish.Zakarath said:Dota 2 has a decent system where you get stuck in a separate 'low-priority' matchmaking for a while, so if you rack up too many reports or abandons, you have to spend some time stuck in a hellish land of trolls and leavers. Not to say there aren't some flaws (getting reported by a band of trolls, getting punished if you suffer an internet/power outage) but it seems better than most alternatives.
That's entirely hyperbolic. No one buys a game just to screw off for every game they ever play. For the few that do, there isn't enough warrant this new system to take care of the problem.BloatedGuppy said:Persistent instances of bad behavior are cumulative. Over hundreds of games, how many hundreds of customers are put off/disrupted by one idiot? If you're running a business, why do you allow for that? Because the idiot might get salty and take his business elsewhere? Because you corked his "good time"?Signa said:They are always equal as long as they were both purchased legally. If it is within their power to keep others from having fun, then we should be equipped with proper weapons to make sure they don't get to have fun either. That doesn't mean removing their property, that means kicking them from the game they are ruining.
Online games do not exist as a singular experience that can be permanently damaged by a bad participant. Why is permanently damaging their experience a fair response?
Whatever measures a company feels they want to take against constantly disruptive players are fair game, IMO. Whether it's banishing them to a low priority gulag or just booting them off the product entirely.
Except what I've typed hasn't violated any rules outside of your delicate sensibilities. You not liking my tone doesn't break any rules of the forums. If I was outright insulting you and and posting swastikas or something then I would probably cop the banhammer and lose my account, which would be fair enough as my actions deserved it. There's nothing naive here, I've been gaming online since dial-up - if people are able to ruin other peoples games and get away with it then some people out there *will* do it until they are removed.gnihton said:I've just taken £40 away from you because I don't like your tone.wickedmonkey said:Yes.
If you're cheating/griefing/being abusive to other players etc. I don't see why developers can't revoke your access to their game. If it's in the EULA/Terms and Conditions and you hit "I accept", then you agreed to play by their rules.
If people are upset because they're now £40 out of pocket and not able to play their shiny new game any more then maybe next time they'll think twice before being a poisonous douche-bucket again.
Of course, you have no right to complain. I mean, did you really expect your punishment for abusing social interaction to be handled socially, rather than by some unrelated authority stepping in? How naive.
What you've typed disgusts me, but I would never demand that it be removed, or more relevantly, that you be banned. Your punishment is that you have my ire, and anyone else's whom you have annoyed. That's how public forums and social interactions work.
I'm in the same position.Bat Vader said:Personally I like and dislike the idea.
No one may buy a game just to be a giant asshat to people (though I don't doubt people create new accounts in F2P games to do so). However there are a lot of people who, by the very nature of existing, cause grief for other players by being giant douches. You don't have to go in with the intent to be a megadouche to end up being a megadouche.Signa said:That's entirely hyperbolic. No one buys a game just to screw off for every game they ever play. For the few that do, there isn't enough warrant this new system to take care of the problem.BloatedGuppy said:Persistent instances of bad behavior are cumulative. Over hundreds of games, how many hundreds of customers are put off/disrupted by one idiot? If you're running a business, why do you allow for that? Because the idiot might get salty and take his business elsewhere? Because you corked his "good time"?Signa said:They are always equal as long as they were both purchased legally. If it is within their power to keep others from having fun, then we should be equipped with proper weapons to make sure they don't get to have fun either. That doesn't mean removing their property, that means kicking them from the game they are ruining.
Online games do not exist as a singular experience that can be permanently damaged by a bad participant. Why is permanently damaging their experience a fair response?
Whatever measures a company feels they want to take against constantly disruptive players are fair game, IMO. Whether it's banishing them to a low priority gulag or just booting them off the product entirely.
If you're concerned about running a business, there are far better ways to handle this. Are you absolutely certain that no one will abuse this system to ban innocent people? Are you certain that Tripwire won't abuse this system to encourage more sales? I do trust Tripwire to not be that stupid, but I'm still not certain. This is the type of thing that opens floodgates for bad policies and customer abuse. If trolls are that much of a problem, just kick and move on. There's no need to accept it and allow Tripwire this kind of power.
I don't disagree about F2P games, but that's a different matter all together.shintakie10 said:No one may buy a game just to be a giant asshat to people (though I don't doubt people create new accounts in F2P games to do so). However there are a lot of people who, by the very nature of existing, cause grief for other players by being giant douches. You don't have to go in with the intent to be a megadouche to end up being a megadouche.
And people like you that willingly roll over when there is something that is offering to take away freedoms because they are inconvenient (I do agree with the sentiments though. Trolls do suck) piss me the fuck off. There is nearly zero benefit to letting this slide, while you stand to lose a lot of money if it goes sour. Why take the risk? I mean seriously, I've said it like 3 times in this thread, what is wrong with a vote-kick system that works in other games? How come isn't that good enough anymore?The people like you who immediately jump to slippery slopes of a terrible wasteland of corporate overlords banning pure innocent little Ted is frankly ridiculous. This is basically the same system they've always had. Its the same system Blizzard has had for the last decade with WoW (and all of their current games as well). Blizzard does wonderfully with their system and if, by some freak accident, you really do get banned when you didn't deserve it the problem gets fixed.
The post below you explains why this is a problem. I don't care what they enforce on their own servers, but it's applying to more than that apparently. I'm not very interested in KF2 because KF1 didn't do much for me. I'm worried about it becoming a standard practice in other games. I'm worried about vague definitions of "harassment" like at the Calgary Expo. I'm worried about big-picture stuff, because it's these little battles that build that scene.Aside from that. Seriously? We can't give Tripwire the right to police their game on their servers that uses their content? What kind of ridiculous argument is that? If they abuse the fuck out of this then they'll rightfully eat shit for it. Until then I'm all for any system that is perfectly willin to start kickin megadouches right in the ass and out the door. Too many people are willin to bend over backwards so asshats that joke about rape and call people niggers and jews constantly don't get their poor feelings offended by actually suffering consequences for their douchiness.
Its about time that people started stepping up and showing these people the door.
Oh dude. What. The. Fuck. Am I reading that right? A dev can ban your whole Steam account?!Jabberwock xeno said:Well, it's not just about killing floor 2 now, but for all of steam: http://steamcommunity.com/actions/WhatIsGameBan
What rubs me the wrong way about this, much like with the paid mod debacle, is that there is no fine print explaining the specifics and how it all works legally? Will it be multiplayer only on official servers? Will there be an appeal system? Will be be refunded if they refuse to agree to these new terms?
IMO, this is fine if it's just banning people from playing online on official servers and/or putting a mark of shame on them. Anything more then that is unreasonable.
I was getting hung up on the bolded part.Game developers inform Valve when a disruptive player has been detected in their game, and Valve applies the game ban to the account.
Sorry, I may have worded my post poorly, I didn't mean to imply it applied to your entire steam account (at least I don't think it does, the wording the page gives isn't exactly specific)Signa said:Oh dude. What. The. Fuck. Am I reading that right? A dev can ban your whole Steam account?!Jabberwock xeno said:Well, it's not just about killing floor 2 now, but for all of steam: http://steamcommunity.com/actions/WhatIsGameBan
What rubs me the wrong way about this, much like with the paid mod debacle, is that there is no fine print explaining the specifics and how it all works legally? Will it be multiplayer only on official servers? Will there be an appeal system? Will be be refunded if they refuse to agree to these new terms?
IMO, this is fine if it's just banning people from playing online on official servers and/or putting a mark of shame on them. Anything more then that is unreasonable.
And this thread is calling me crazy and ill-founded.
Edit: Ok, I read it about 15 times now, and I'm probably just paranoid. I think it's saying that a specific game can be banned from a Steam account, which is ultimately what we are discussing here.
I was getting hung up on the bolded part.Game developers inform Valve when a disruptive player has been detected in their game, and Valve applies the game ban to the account.
I don't think anybody here is not in favor of banning people who are being disruptive to other people playing thr game as well inside the game. People who oppose this oppose it because it applies to offline play and private servers as well, , in which case a better comparison is if you feel if a person who is sitting in their own home should have the movie taken away from them just because they said something disruptive while they were out taking their dog for a walk.Lightknight said:Yes, for the same reason I think an asshole standing up and shouting in a movie theater during the movie should be removed.
Do you think disruptive players should be banned from playing the game alone, though?Rebel_Raven said:The developers have control over their game. They set the rules. Break the rules at your own peril. If people want to forget (or don't care) that they're making the lives of others miserable, then they should own up to the repercussions.
Of course it'd help to have their games set aside so only the people misbehaving only play with their ilk, but not every game developer has the resources to set it up.
The problem is, like any ratings system, or just about any system that allows a community to police itself are, essentially the assholes that are going to abuse it.
Many years of experience in multiplayer games suggests otherwise.Signa said:That's entirely hyperbolic. No one buys a game just to screw off for every game they ever play. For the few that do, there isn't enough warrant this new system to take care of the problem.
I'm not concerned with evil corporate overlords flexing their muscle and banning me from games to force new purchases because in 30+ years of gaming this has happened to me never. In the same 30+ years of gaming I've had literally thousands upon thousands of incidences of unchecked asshats blowing up an evening's entertainment because pissing people off is their driving passion in life.Signa said:There's no need to accept it and allow Tripwire this kind of power.
Holy crap! Would you happen to know how long ago Valve implemented that policy? That's a bit scary.Jabberwock xeno said:Well, it's not just about killing floor 2 now, but for all of steam: http://steamcommunity.com/actions/WhatIsGameBan
What rubs me the wrong way about this, much like with the paid mod debacle, is that there is no fine print explaining the specifics and how it all works legally? Will it be multiplayer only on official servers? Will there be an appeal system? Will be be refunded if they refuse to agree to these new terms?
Well, why not? My parents would always took away my games whenever I misbehaved as a kid. Why shouldn't you be treated the same way for acting like one?Bat Vader said:After watching this video from ReviewTech USA about how the Killing Floor 2 Devs plan on revoking access of their game to trolls and griefers. It begs the question but should people lose access to a game because they are generally unpleasant? Here is the video.
Personally I like and dislike the idea. I agree that griefers, trolls, and other generally unpleasant people shouldn't be allowed to play with others that just want to play the game and have fun. I don't think it's right they lose access to their game. I'm curious as to what others think of this. Do people find this to be a good idea or too harsh?