Bareck, on 11 August 2019 - 07:23 PM, said:
It was the same thing about Anthem(before the game failed), when people found you needed Origin many said that they weren't going to play it.
Not the same. EA
owns Origin and has been publishing all their PC releases there for years now. I'm more surprised anyone expected Anthem to
not be an Origin exclusive at this point.
Bareck, on 11 August 2019 - 07:23 PM, said:
but I don't understand the anger and refunds just because you have to download another app on your desktop. (...)
and the app itself weights barely nothing so I really don't understand the fuss.(...)
I will never understand not playing a game you like because of the app it is installed in.
Then you haven't paid attention to points that have been reiterated multiple times over. This isn't about "just another launcher".
- The primary issue is that I - and the other pre-order buyers - specifically paid for a Steam key, not an Epic one. It would have still been an issue if the new platform was one that I support, such as GOG.
- The secondary issue is that PGI has admitted they were planning to render themselves unable to uphold their end of that bargain in advance (you think their agreement with Epic sprung from nothing?).
- The tertiary issue is PGI outright lying to their paying customers when the FAQ concerns were raised.
- The quarternary issue is that PGI has - so far - shown an unwillingness to honor the original bargain in any manner.
- That Epic's platform is sub-standard, with a track record of deficient - indeed, absent until **** hit the fan - security practices and sub-standard customer service is at best a quinary issue (although it still is one).
So why Epic is an issue at all? Well, as unpopular as Origin and Uplay have been Epic makes them look like paragons of competence and virtue in comparison.
- 1. Epic launched their platform some two years before they were actually ready. Better part of a year after launch, it's still charitable to call it an open alpha, EXCEPT IT'S FULLY COMMERCIAL AND WANTS YOU TO GIVE IT YOUR MONEY.
- 2. Epic failed at security. They launched without 2FA and didn't have e-mail verification until last week. Yes, that means you could lose all your purchases if you made a typo creating your account. And people did.
- 3. They don't have a cart. And they started banning customers because the customers made several purchases one after another. During a sale.
- 4. They have sent customers' personal information to other customers.
- 5. Epic's client datamines your system. (see this)
- 6. EGS features, library and user base are not competitive with Steam, so Epic's genius executives decided that since they're sitting on a giant mountain of Fortnite cash (plus the 1.25 billion USD investment they've received last October), they can fake competitiveness with platform exclusives and force customers to come to them by getting developers to jump platforms after they've already taken a shitload of preorders (or, in some cases, Kickstarter pledges).
Most of the PC gaming crowd are not fans of hostageware, much less of bait-and-switch tactics. This bait and switch riles people up and as a result Epic's poorly designed shitshow of a platform is pretty much considered radioactive by the bulk of the PC gaming community.
Let it sink in for a moment and then ask yourself if any sane person right now would touch a platform with that history.
Yeah, yeah, "give them time"... I've heard that spiel. Epic isn't travelling back in time to compete with Steam of 2003, they're here
NOW to compete with Steam of 2019, after fifteen years of watching Steam take upon itself the live market testing to determine what does and what doesn't work in their hybrid digital distribution platform / social network. Epic is coming to this with a budget and market position much better than what Steam had in 2003 too.
And yet, EGS launched in a state that was about a year away from being a minimally viable beta and is already falling behind development schedule. There is no excuse for this.
SLDFSpectreSix, on 11 August 2019 - 07:33 PM, said:
I got the game as a gift. I didn't spend a single dime on it.
Then you don't have a horse in this race, mate. Unlike you, most of us paid for their pre-order out of pocket and expect PGI to honor the purchase on the terms under which it was made (or as close to that as possible)
Edited by Horseman, 12 August 2019 - 03:04 AM.