Zhukov said:
Umm... I'm not entirely sure "entitlement" means what you think it means.
In fact, one could say this is a growing issue.
rumdumconundrum said:
"That ending sucked! I want a refund!"
The ending they lied about? Because that was kind of the main reason behind the refund.
In fact, we are entitled to a reasonable expectation that a commercial product will work as advertised.
"Why are they CHARGING for the DLC? This is ridiculous!"
Depending on the context, it is ridiculous.
Being cheap, however, is not being entitled.
"I'm pirating this game because $60 is too expensive!"
Okay, here we actually get to something that might count. People are not entitled to games. They choose to purchase them or not. Something being too expensive is never a justification to pirate a luxury item.
"I didn't like how this person wrote this character! BURN THE WITCH!"
Being a sociopathic asshole is not entitlement. Nobody should be threatened for being a bad writer or writing something you don't like, but again, that doesn't mean there's an entitlement issue.
"Why do I have to sit here and patch my game? I wanna play NOW!"
One of the selling points of consoles is that they are simplified and 'just work.' The idea that games should play out of the box is not unreasonable. Otherwise, why are we even shelling out so much for simplified PCs?
Even then, wanting to play now doesnt' make you entitled.
The Verdict: Five examples, with one example of entitlement, one example of a false sense of entitlement. A 20% accuracy rate AND you're berating people for actually feeling entitled where entitlement is due.
This s the growing trend: berating people as entitled when they're not being entitled, or actually have a legitimate reason to feel that way. Are you also going to complain about people feeling "entitled" to a working PS4?
Special treatment could be mean that the games industry (or other large body) should bow to a sole person's (or interest group's) will.
It could, but contextually doesn't. Besides, by that definition, you could call shooter fans entitled because they are effectively coercing the industry.
Or we could stop trying for backdoor justifications.
The game designers are entitled to make those design choices for good or for ill.
Unless they lie or violate business practices. Bioware/EA was not entitled to lie. They can claim artistic integrity until they're blue in the face, but when they make commercial statements about a retail product, they no longer have artistic freedom.
the hidden eagle said:
Funny how if someone tried to use the "entitled" card in any other industry then they would get funny looks.Hell most companies wish they could get away with stuff like many in the game industry are currently doing.
Even funnier how someone who dislikes a movie or a meal can still ask for a refund. When gamers do it, it's entitlement and companies should have artistic freedom.
It's like the gaming industry survives on bile or something. Even Hollywood knows it's a good idea to perform basic customer service, despite being a billion follar industry and being able to afford o piss off a few people. Instead, Gaming has got away with a lot of their shtick because they've somehow managed to convince a ton of people that the same sort of basic standards of quality (and I use the term loosely) in other industries are 'entitlements' in the negative sense and that consumers who want these 'entitlements' are somehow seeking special snowflake status.