• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

An open statement to game companies

Page 2 - Seeking answers? Join the AnandTech community: where nearly half-a-million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.
So no compromise? - just like the USA Congress 😛

What if your ideology is wrong? You "believe".
😕

Ideology cannot be wrong, by definition. It is always right for those that hold it. And no, I never compromise on matters of principle. Other things, sure, but never principle.
 
Ideology cannot be wrong, by definition.
Perhaps that is the problem.

At any rate, there are far more serious issues in the world that people have to be concerned with than over-invasive DRM. Ubi uses their methods because they think it works for them. They have swallowed the DRM-line, hook, line and stinker. They have to justify poor sales and piracy makes the perfect scapegoat.

It is Ubi's ideology.
 
I understand taking a position and sticking with it, even though I'm more pragmatic about it than you.

I want to play more games than GoG.com offers, so I give Steam money and just accept that I'm possibly "renting" those games.

I paid $3 for Torchlight and have played it for 50 hours so if Steam disappeared tomorrow I wouldn't feel like I'd been ripped off. If you wait for sales you can buy (or "rent" if you prefer) many great games for $5 - 15.

Perhaps you should think of it that way -- you're not buying Fallout 3 or Dragon Age 1 with all of the DLC for $12, you're just signing up for a long term rental that might happen to last for the rest of your life.
 
I understand taking a position and sticking with it, even though I'm more pragmatic about it than you.

I want to play more games than GoG.com offers, so I give Steam money and just accept that I'm possibly "renting" those games.

I paid $3 for Torchlight and have played it for 50 hours so if Steam disappeared tomorrow I wouldn't feel like I'd been ripped off. If you wait for sales you can buy (or "rent" if you prefer) many great games for $5 - 15.

Perhaps you should think of it that way -- you're not buying Fallout 3 or Dragon Age 1 with all of the DLC for $12, you're just signing up for a long term rental that might happen to last for the rest of your life.

That's nothing more than rationalizing a situation to satiate your own desires. I realize it's fine for most people, but for idealists it's a non-starter. It's wrong (to me), and there is nothing that would allow moving past it. *shrug* Just the down side of certain personality traits.
 
Back
Top