CadoSanguinarius, on 05 March 2017 - 06:10 PM, said:
yay 50th thread in general discussion about the PTS skill tree
If you were swapping modules around not by modules for every mech you were exploiting the game. Modules were only moveable so you didnt lose 6-12 million cbills every time you decided to change your mechs load out. It was never intended for you to be stingy on cbills and swap modules around and used the saved cbills to get extra mechs you couldn't actually aford to get if you were buying things correctly.
This format also encouraged people to drop without modules because by people being stingy and exploiting they were also the ones more likely to be lazy and drop without modules in games. hindering themselves and their side.
Stop bitching that you cant exploit the game anymore and spend cbills like your supposed to or get a new game.
"You used a mechanic that PGI put in the game, deliberately, and supported for years with features which encouraged re-use of modules, culminating in an inventory tab dedicated to modules as if they were any other piece of equipment! That means you were abusing an exploit!"
Um... no. That's not quite how
words work.
An
exploit is an unintended game mechanic resulting from a
bug in a game's code, which normally results in disciplinary action being taken against players abusing it. Rather than do that, PGI instead listened to community feedback and made it
easier to swap modules between 'Mechs by adding an inventory tab and allowing players to quickly search for modules by mousing over their 'Mechs in the selection screen. Module swapping, therefore, is a developer-supported
feature, not an exploit. It was handled no differently than engine swapping, weapon swapping, or support equipment swapping. PGI is now changing that feature... which does not imply that they believe its previous usage was in any way a violation of the TOS. They're taking the game in a new direction, which is fine, but not agreeing with that direction is not the same as
cheating at the gorram game, and that's what you're claiming.
Unless, of course, you define "exploit" as "people using a feature I personally dislike" which, while an unfortunately common arument in online gaming communities, is also completely and utterly devoid of any merit whatsoever. Perhaps you might consider a different hobby? One where things that other people do, within the scope of the game mechanics as designed, don't make you frothing mad? Perhaps gardening, or crochet?
Edited by WrathOfDeadguy, 05 March 2017 - 10:02 PM.