Naduk, on 30 June 2016 - 05:39 PM, said:
People do not need to be active players to enjoy a tournament
Millions of people watch and enjoy starcraft tournaments who have never even played the game
Just like real sports , I am not required to have played or even know the rules of volleyball for me to enjoy watching a game of it on TV
I have never ridden a horse , yet I was completely captivated by full metal jousting
A public facing competitive scene draws new players and new money over time
We already have the ultra competitive players who run their own ladders and events
Why not give it a public face
I really don't understand why people get a bee in their bonnet over this
They are building the strength of the game
That means you get to enjoy it for longer and you get more features over time
It's not like they are choosing this over other things
They are just doing this first to do other stuff better later
If I thought they were choosing this over making a full featured game I wouldn't be happy about it either. As it is, why not have some competition.
Ted Wayz, on 30 June 2016 - 04:15 PM, said:
If they could have done it without draining $100k from development I would agree.
Game development is going into the 100's of millions these days. Can barely get a decent car for 100k these days. This is a lot of fun for a lot of peeps and everything so its most likely money well spent.
One of the high rises I was working on, on Vancouver waterfront, has a waterfall in the entrance way. The builder had a thanks thing at the restaurant neareby right on the water for some of the guys. The bill was 15k. He had a few of those for the different trades.
Was funny I drank way to much and one of the girls kept telling me to order another drink, and the waitress kept saying, "This isn't a bar" and refused to bring me another.
Then the chic would tell me to order another again and I would try again and get the same answer.
Its funny now.
I was personal friends with the builders brother so I didn't mind running the tab.
Contrary to how this sounds I was just skilled labour doing back breaking work though.
One time I was at work doing a warehouse with like 50 foot walls... tons of work. Got pulled off the job into a board room with like 8 execs, for one of the makers of the materials we were using and asked how good it was and how it could be improved along with 3 other guys from around the city. Just lucky that way.
I told some of the apprentices. Some people pay to work out. We get paid to work out. With that in mind hard labour isn't so bad.
Edited by Johnny Z, 30 June 2016 - 07:41 PM.