Captain Luffy, on 10 June 2016 - 06:49 AM, said:
I have none, absolutely none, and so much a lack of patience that I despise the word patience.
So when we (we as the community) hear of little tid bits such as,
"Well after the production meeting today it's clear that the next few patches are going to be huge."
Or
"There are some very important and overdue features such as mech scaling and command wheel."
Or
"But perhaps most exciting is the fact that players will have never seen this amount of polish and bug fixing."
I get excited but then it takes only a few hours or a day at max and I start looking like ...
Waiting for more details and juicy facts that I can start dreaming on with how to impliment them into my mechs or game play so I can dominate the battlefield.
SO FOR THE LOVE OF GIVE ME MORE DETAILS!!!
As a software developer myself, let me tell you a little bit about the work behind a sofware (actually the same as everywhere else, but many people believe we just push three buttons and a new feature is done).
- Things, even those that appear trivial to the user, are complex. Insanely, absurdly complex.
- Things never go as planned. People gett sick or leave or just make usual mistakes. Details turn out to be MUCH more complex during implementation, no matter how well-designed they were beforehand. Third party tools make problems, throw you back days or weeks in your progress without any fault of your own (personally, sometimes I get the feeling every software is crap built upon crap which is built upon another crap and all that crap piles up until it's a miracle that anything ever worked to any degree at all)
- You are never, NEVER on schedule if you want to do "everything right" (nice features, full testing, documentation, etc). I'm not talking about days here, but months.
As far as more information is concerned:
I'd like to have those, too, but I also know:
- Customers will hold every single word, every syllable of premature information before you. You can NEVER win by giving out information earlier than absolutely necessary/final and it's because of the immaturity of customers, not because of the developers.
- Investing time to nicely compile unfinalized information takes a LOT of time. And guess what gets even further delayed by it.
Bottom line:
Things are complex. Be patient.
Sorry, this is reality.
Edited by Paigan, 10 June 2016 - 08:04 AM.