Quote:
Imperator Fyron said:
Artaud said:
I sense a growing hostility here toward those of us who are not happy with the way SEV turned out. Some here are sick and tired of listening to us, and the clear message is to sing praise or keep quiet.
Huh? I haven't noticed any such message or hostility.
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I have. It's nothing I can put a finger on and say "Here's the hostility! Here's what we're talking about! Everyone look at this!" but I've felt it. I've seen little or no outright bashing of critics on the forums, but I have noticed that many criticisms are summarily ignored, yielding contempt and a growing split. Maybe that's why you haven't noticed it.
Quote:
Santiago said:
The release imo should have waited a little longer, but its a trade-off. More bugs are getting squashed sooner.
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There certainly comes a time in debugging where you have part of the code bug free, and part buggy... when fixing bugs reaches diminishing returns and releasing the game (via public beta, full release, etc.) becomes more cost efficient. I think the only thing you can argue about here is where exactly that point of diminishing returns lies, and of course everyone has their own opinion.
For the sake of argument, we can divide the end users up into the moderately-fan-to-hardcore-forumgoer category and the new-or-non-forumgoer user. As a member of the former, I know that se5 has immense potential like se4 did. Contributions from people like Fyron, Kwok, SJ, AT, etc will provide enough options that most of us will be able to find a niche we like. I will eventually buy the game. Folks that fall under the latter category will likely read the reviews that were based on the initial buggy release and say no thanks. Unfortunately sites like cnet.com and ign don't go back periodically and update reviews based on patches and mods that come out a year after release. That would certainly help.
I think a public beta period *would have* helped if malfaydor was a large enough company to handle all the bug reports (this has been discussed on the forums before). This has almost all the benefits associated with a full release without the negative reviews that come with a buggy release. The alternative to a public beta is fewer bugs to begin with. Aaron managed neither. That's why we have this thread.