Honestly, I never liked Dane Cook as a comdian/actor, I like him more if was an actor/comedian because then I'd see why his material is average.
You would be surprised. Most successful companies build a well-oiled, efficient system for doing the dumbest things possible, but it only seems so from the outside. To them everyone is doing their job; i.e. covering their own ass and passing the buck to some other department. This is how successful companies, such as oh say, I don't know, Sony's Playstation department, turn a runaway success like the PSX and PS2, and then make the collosal abortion that is the PS3 oh god I shouldn't have said that *makes crucifix with fingers to ward off Sony fanboy-vampires*Pendragon9 said:Business model is usually to NOT do something stupid. EA seems to not follow that general rule, though. They'd make alot more money if they actually got their act together. They have much room for improvement.
Ah, so despite the mistakes EA makes, me disliking them is not okay, yet making a crack at the PS3's expense is just fine?Grampy_bone said:You would be surprised. Most successful companies build a well-oiled, efficient system for doing the dumbest things possible, but it only seems so from the outside. To them everyone is doing their job; i.e. covering their own ass and passing the buck to some other department. This is how successful companies, such as oh say, I don't know, Sony's Playstation department, turn a runaway success like the PSX and PS2, and then make the collosal abortion that is the PS3 oh god I shouldn't have said that *makes crucifix with fingers to ward off Sony fanboy-vampires*Pendragon9 said:Business model is usually to NOT do something stupid. EA seems to not follow that general rule, though. They'd make alot more money if they actually got their act together. They have much room for improvement.
We do not hate EA for making money, we hate them for making games.xmetatr0nx said:Well all i know is their sales figures speak for themselves. If you hate them for making money then hate every other company for the same reasons, isnt that the point of a business model?Pendragon9 said:Good reason for that actually. They take good franchises and kill them, they rehash the same sports games over and over again, they often show blatant bias against certain consoles or just deny consoles good things in general, etc.xmetatr0nx said:I dont know, why do people hate EA?
Would you like to take your pick?
Anyway, people hate Mainstream because sometimes mainstream can be overhyped to the point where they think something can cure cancer when it can barely treat a cold. The thing in question may be good, but it might not be worthy of all the praise. That's where the hate comes from.
Pretty much sums it up.Erana said:Being different makes them feel special.
Err, pardon me, but maybe I didn't make myself clear. I was trying to agree with you. Yes, EA is dumb and does dumb things. I agree with you there. I made the Sony reference only for the sake of argument as an example.Pendragon9 said:Ah, so despite the mistakes EA makes, me disliking them is not okay, yet making a crack at the PS3's expense is just fine?Grampy_bone said:You would be surprised. Most successful companies build a well-oiled, efficient system for doing the dumbest things possible, but it only seems so from the outside. To them everyone is doing their job; i.e. covering their own ass and passing the buck to some other department. This is how successful companies, such as oh say, I don't know, Sony's Playstation department, turn a runaway success like the PSX and PS2, and then make the collosal abortion that is the PS3 oh god I shouldn't have said that *makes crucifix with fingers to ward off Sony fanboy-vampires*Pendragon9 said:Business model is usually to NOT do something stupid. EA seems to not follow that general rule, though. They'd make alot more money if they actually got their act together. They have much room for improvement.
And you call me the fanboy. Ironic.
Because people always feel the need to be 'Different'. Makes them feel cool.Captain Spiral said:I was watching Dane Cook (yes I'm a fan) and I began wondering why people suddenly began to hate him so much once he became mainstream.
The same with Halo. It was praised and then became really popular and people turned against it.
Same with music, anime, movies, tv shows. If people do like it they won't admit it to others, because they're... idk afraid of people's opinion of them?
Why are people so against mainstream? Please tell me your opinion!
That sounds pretty out there. Where's the profit in that? And since Microsoft is fixing their mistakes, are they technically doing the accepted business model, or are they actually doing good?Grampy_bone said:Err, pardon me, but maybe I didn't make myself clear. I was trying to agree with you. Yes, EA is dumb and does dumb things. I agree with you there. I made the Sony reference only for the sake of argument as an example.Pendragon9 said:Ah, so despite the mistakes EA makes, me disliking them is not okay, yet making a crack at the PS3's expense is just fine?Grampy_bone said:You would be surprised. Most successful companies build a well-oiled, efficient system for doing the dumbest things possible, but it only seems so from the outside. To them everyone is doing their job; i.e. covering their own ass and passing the buck to some other department. This is how successful companies, such as oh say, I don't know, Sony's Playstation department, turn a runaway success like the PSX and PS2, and then make the collosal abortion that is the PS3 oh god I shouldn't have said that *makes crucifix with fingers to ward off Sony fanboy-vampires*Pendragon9 said:Business model is usually to NOT do something stupid. EA seems to not follow that general rule, though. They'd make alot more money if they actually got their act together. They have much room for improvement.
And you call me the fanboy. Ironic.
The part I disagreed with is how you said "business model is to not do stupid things." On the contrary, the accepted business model is often to do exactly stupid things, as much as possible, until the company fails. For more examples: the American auto industry, the mainframe computing industry (destroyed by PCs, which they considered toys), the American steel industry, the MP3 player market (destroyed walkmans and cd players), etc.
I love how we got here from Dane Cook.Grampy_bone said:Microsoft isn't fixing anything. They are a billion dollars in the hole from red rings. They are fleeing upmarket (moar grafixth, moar h4rdw4re) and trying to compete with the last place while ignoring the true threat. Xbox live, as good as it is, only appeals to a niche market which cannot support Microsoft long-term.
What has Mircosoft done right? Achievements. MS bet that even though they had the "weaker" console it would be "good enough" for most gamers while offering the advantage of achievements. Sony realized this mistake and tried to counter it with Trophies but it is probably too late.
Consider this: in every generation the "weakest" console tech-wise has always won. What does that tell you?
Funny thing is, is that if any console was the mainstream one back then, it was the PS2. Heck it still is.megapenguinx said:I never liked Dane Cook or Halo that much. I was not a fan of the Xbox back then and was a huge PS2 fanboy. Dane Cook, I just don't find that funny
So does that make me a fanboy of the mainstream?Assassinator said:Mainstream means that it appeals to a lot of people, and because it does that it means that it has something that a lot of people like. And because people are always so different, there are only a few common interests, therefor a mainstream game will never be really creative. But then again, as Yathzee says, something can always be populair simply because it's good.
Funny thing is, is that if any console was the mainstream one back then, it was the PS2. Heck it still is.megapenguinx said:I never liked Dane Cook or Halo that much. I was not a fan of the Xbox back then and was a huge PS2 fanboy. Dane Cook, I just don't find that funny