| 173 posts found | |
|---|---|
|
2/13/13 7:01:32 PM#101
I love to complain, do I have a right to? Maybe not, but heck it is sure fun!! Life is Short, Read a Book. |
|
|
2/13/13 7:02:12 PM#102
Originally posted by Corehaven +1 you've earned your avatar sir -salutes-
Also to reduce the debate to absurdity (the debate over if you can complain about something which is free or not) I posit the following question: If you were starving, you went to someone asked for food but had nothing to give them, and they come back with a plate full of their own shit would you A) not complain and eat the shit? or B) complain and tell everyone about their behaviour so in future no one else suffers such a event? |
|
|
2/13/13 7:07:49 PM#103
Originally posted by eddieg50 I nervously hope that this post is a subtle joke about American stereotypes. |
|
|
2/13/13 7:10:38 PM#104
Hmmm, do you live in the US? Yeah they have the right, technically, to their freedom of speech to complain.....Whether anyone has to heed their call another topic for another day.
|
|
|
2/13/13 7:17:47 PM#105
Originally posted by jonesing22 Have you considered the possibility that when someone says "right to complain", they aren't mounting a constitutional challenge, but rather are asking whether people think those complaints should be given equal attention to the feedback of paying players? |
|
|
2/13/13 7:22:35 PM#106
Originally posted by Zooce About as true a statement as you will get on these forums. |
|
|
2/13/13 7:25:35 PM#107
Originally posted by bcbully I think the word "right" as in "you do/don't have the right to do something" is not really the correct word to use. I honetly don't know what the correct word is, but the "rights" an individual has is laid out by whatever country they live in not by forum commentors. If a forum allows open discussion on a topic regardless of who is subscribing to a game (like the forums at mmorpg.com) we have whatever rights the forum allows for discussion based on the TOS. So, based on the TOS of mmorpg.com we have the right to say pretty much whatever we want about a mmo wether we sub to it or not. If people don't like that, then they should either petition mmorpg.com to only allow those that have put money toward a game to duscuss it (good luck getting the logistics down on that one) or ignore them. Why do so many people around here want to prevent negative threads about games? These are not fan forums. They are not for the sole purpose of discussing why we like a game. |
|
|
2/13/13 7:26:34 PM#108
Originally posted by Aeonblades Unfortunately, not everyone has that right. Fortunately though, most do. |
|
|
2/13/13 7:26:46 PM#109
Originally posted by maplestone In that case, they should say "whether people think those complaints should be given equal attention to the feedback of paying players" instead of "Do free players have the right to ...". Why should i guess all the possibility of how the OP could have miscommunicated? |
|
|
2/13/13 7:34:25 PM#110
Originally posted by Onomas Pretty much my sentiments on this issue. +1 |
|
|
2/13/13 7:49:28 PM#111
Originally posted by nariusseldon Because telepathy has not yet been perfected?
|
|
|
2/14/13 1:36:15 AM#112
Originally posted by Quaiden Well said, nothing to add. :-)) |
|
|
2/14/13 2:09:10 AM#113
Originally posted by Yizle
And about as smart and wise statement as saying round circle is round. No shit sherlocks!
This is not about valid criticism. It's about gamers getting something for free without giving anything back at all. Except: - their presence which is there for purely egoistical reasons anyway, which is personal fun. - complaints Yes, complaints MAY or MAY NOT be valid. Again, this is not really about certain complaints being valid or not. This is about ethics and morality. A gamer that ONLY takes and never gives back is esentialy a leecher. I hope you guys realise if everyone on this world would only take there would soon be nothing left. If the only thing someone is able to give back is complaints than I can with certainty claim they don't have the right to do it. They are only doing it to gain more for themselves anyway. So there we go, it's immoral to do it. Will people still do it? Of course! People are immoral, they don't give a shit about things like this, especialy when under safety of internet immunity.
That said, smart developers will still be able to pull the best out of it and weed out the good from the bad.
|
|
|
2/14/13 2:25:11 AM#114
Originally posted by daltanious
Excuse my rather inflated example, I am not trying to equalise murder with complaining, just want to make a clear example (refer to my previous post why I think complaints in this case are immoral):
By your logic I have the right to kill someone but I don't have the right to expect to be free and to not sit in jail?
Free speech? Don't make me lol. Saying this on heavily moderated forums definitely sounds special. Get out of that fairy tail you live in guys. |
|
|
2/14/13 2:26:05 AM#115
Yes, of course. However, one should clearly understand the difference between technical issues (where all players are equal: lag/bug affects everyone), proposals (where only logic should rule, keeping in mind that company should get profit) and just screaming ("gimme shiny horse for free!", "make anything free!"). Screaming should not be heared, no matter who screams, paying or free customer. Topic "f2p get what they deserve" - is a matter of another discussion. As one forum says - "you get what you pay for". What comes in mind – my two played games: Istaria and Lord of the rings online. Both have restrictions for free-players, but both are willing to hear free ones like me. After all, free player may become paying customer - but only if he is heared. If he's ignored, he may just move to another mmorpg. http://www.mmoblogg.wordpress.com |
|
|
2/14/13 3:20:44 AM#116
Apparently freeloaders complain regardless of whether they have the right to do so or not. They are mostly ignored by the devs though - as are paying customers for that matter.
Seems to me a lot of people are living in some fantasy world where they are the center of the universe and where their opinions are really important, even when it comes to such meaningless things as computer games. I literally laughed out loud when people in this thread started drawing parallells to starvation, air pollution and presidential elections; what the hell does that has to do with entitled brats whining because they don't get enough free entertainment? Get out of your bubbles guys. The ftp trend has brought this stupid idea into people's minds that games "need" freeloaders. They don't. They need paying customers, and you only matter as long as you're willing to pull out your credit card. |
|
|
2/14/13 3:28:07 AM#117
A paying customer in law has more rights than a non paying one in fact a non paying member of the public has what I can think of as only accident liability while on the premsis.
Tribes Ascend Link Sign Up Foo, its fun: https://account.hirezstudios.com/tribesascend/?referral=214829&utm_campaign=email |
|
|
Adamantine
Elite Member
Joined: 1/07/08
War is not the ultima ratio, but the ultima irratio - Willy Brandt |
2/14/13 3:49:34 AM#118
Its called free speech. Its a human right, thus a birthright of everyone. So yeah, everyone has the right to complain. About anything. And if a company wants a f2p player to pay for their services, they would probably want to listen about complains and check out if these complains are reasonable. |
|
2/14/13 4:02:39 AM#119
Originally posted by StarI Gotta ask... how many times were you dropped on your head as an infant? Morality has nothing to do with the discussion but just to nail you to the cross with your own words: Players are content, an MMO without players not matter how fun and innovative is a ghost town no one will likely play because running around in a large open world in a social game where no one else is around is something few people do and most of whom I'd strongly suggest psychiatric help to. So as a free player you have every right to bitch, moan and complain when you have valid reasons to as much as those who sub or pay for the game via microstransactions, why? Because you are one of the reasons why the people who pay the devs do so (you being a part of a community and contributing, for good or ill, to the general feel of said community).
Just a few examples for the Hell of it: DDO without a large community would present no reason for you as a free player to invest money into the game because the content offered for free is more than enough but once you get friends and wanna start doing runs through dungeons which need content pack purchases... well then you start considering it. World of Tanks without a massive community would have no drive to be number 1 or at least close to nr 1, why? because in a limited group of people competition is gonna be understandbly lax but with the millions already playing it a new or even veteran player such as me feels the need to get an edge in-game or to get that next tank a little bit faster so you can be the guy who saves the day for a team .
Star Trek Online without a decent sized community would have no reason for guilds ergo most of the C-store stuff would go unused.
Path of Exile without a fierce and competitive community would have no reason for players to want to feel unique ergo buy more cosmetics items to make themselves stand out amongst the crowd.
|
|
|
2/14/13 4:06:20 AM#120
Yeah it is a matter of you can voice your opinion, yet weither your opinion is heard or such is well based on how much the company or devs have to gain. It woud come to doing what a free-playing characters wants in the game for them, and how it would affect the paying customers, and if it would net them a loss largely or gain. Such as implimenting a change that brought alot of free-players into subbing, but than caused twice that amount of paying customers to un-sub for that same reason. It is also that a free-player should never have as much weight in their opinions, and such as a paying customer, since the paying customer is not potential income like the free-player but is actually largely a stable income for the game.
|
|