I mean, who was searching for that before the game released? I imagine you’d see the same trend with basically every game immediately following release. Not to downplay the issues the game has having, but this is like a “duh” kind of thing.
The number of people playing Suicide Squad has grown infinity percent since the games release therefore I personally think it’s a success.
Did they do preorders for the Early Access version, as well?
Sorry… I’m gonna stop giving them ideas. Things are bad enough already.
They did, yes. Getting pretty common these days. Early Access with a preorder of a higher priced digital edition of a game. Seems relatively harmless to me. I would never pay for that, but I think if it means that much to you, it’s not hurting anything.
I feel somewhat the same on single player, but this is competitive GAAS, and they knew exactly what they were doing when they did it here. People who do this seriously already know every map, every spawn and every weapons characteristics within three days. (I’m wrong about this see below) This is simply another pay to win mechanic for the kind of people who play 12 hours a day, reach max rank in three days and hunt rookies who didn’t spend the extra money to play early.
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I have been corrected and apologize for the mistake. It is not competitive and that mostly renders my point moot. I’m leaving this here for posterity.
It’s not competitive. It’s cooperative. It doesn’t even have a pvp mode.
And even if it had a pvp mode, 3 days isn’t going to change anything long term. It’s such a minor issue. It’s just another thing for people to needlessly complain about.
Thank you for correcting my misinformaion. I have edited my post, while pointing out the error, My sincere apologies.
No one wants “games as a service” or always online games,.
These companies get what they deserve
What about people who want to play multiplayer games? Like, when I play Counterstrike in a ranked fashion I sort of expect the service part… Same for games like Overwatch, Valorant, Dota, League, etc.
I feel like you’re missing a clarification of “No one wants Always Online or GaaS in single player or coop titles”?
Well, I’m sure there are plenty out there that do want multiplayer only games.
Personally I avoid them like the plague. I would love it if Valorant, overwatch, etc came with a single player campaign that could be played offline, or an option to play against bots.
I hate people. Especially random competitive online people.
I’d prefer it release with modding tools so the community could make maps and skins. I’d also prefer it to release with the ability to host my own server. I also don’t give a shit about meaningless ranking. All this shit is a poison pill for me.
Every game should have this tbh. A lot of the big genres and games in recent years came from literally this. Modern mobas and battleroyals come to mind .
Instead what we have is Epic delisting all the Unreal and Unreal Tournament games from all the stores and shutting down the master servers for the multiplayer games. There was a time when games were going to be restricted, but managed to survive on the basis that they were art and therefor protected under free speech laws. You can’t even get American McGee’s Alice legally anymore and it was absolutely art created by masters of the engine at that point.
Hmmmm no, no one wants always online on anything. Why should you ever have a piece of your property that has no use without an internet connection?
At the very least, you should be about to play against bots offline.
Well yeah. Games that are inherently multi-player and not split screen and feature an aspect of matchmaking are obviously fine to be always online games as a service.
Although personally the games-as-a-service model is something I avoid even in those. Overwatch was made objectively worse when it went from the buy-once model to the pay-once-a-season-or-you-dont-get-the-new-hero model. Mauga is completely busted right now and every new introduction of a hero since 2 launched has felt exactly like this-- busted while paid-only players have access and then fixed after the free players get a chance.
It’s the model. Squeezing money out of players is slowly killing even multi-player games like Overwatch.
It’s completely and utterly unacceptable for single player games.
I think if you own a copy of Counterstrike, you should be able to play offline
Rocksteady took the game entirely offline to fix a devastating bug that would lead to new players receiving 100% completion of the entire game without having done anything.
LOL
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Developed by the legendary studio Rocksteady, known for the Batman Arkham games, Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League launched in early access this week.
Later on, IGN and other major press outlets previewed the game, with a near unanimous negative tone, which is rare to see occur so broadly.
It’s worth noting that Windows Central was also not offered review codes, but it’s not entirely unexpected with a live service game.
To gain early access, you need the Suicide Squad: To Kill the Justice League Deluxe Edition, which costs an absurd $100.
You might expect that searches for “refund” wouldn’t exist before the game had launched anyway, but the spike seems to have been triggered specifically by its 100% completion bug.
This is a bad time for games to struggle commercially, as various firms look to cost cutting measures faced with a squeeze on capital and operating margins.
The original article contains 781 words, the summary contains 148 words. Saved 81%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Ya love to see it
Anyone, and I do mean ANYONE who buys ANY GAME before it’s released deserves what they get. You people got the gaming industry into this situation.
Honestly? I’d like to see a second videogame crash. Kill off most of the major publishers, start over from scratch… Ain’t happening, but sometimes I wish.
When was the first?
1980’s.
E T phoned in a nuke on the game industry
launch bugs are what they are, but I’m mostly disappointed to hear of how little people are enjoying the actual game when it’s functioning as-intended. I loved the arkham series and the flowy, beautiful combat it has. Between it and the very similar middle earth games, I’ve put in hundreds of hours of counter and dodge focused ass-kicking, and I was hoping for more in a universe that I actually quite like.
I am simple man. I see Early Access, I ditch game entirely.
Lots of great indie games stay on Early Access for a while and end up becoming amazing games.
But yeah, for an IP this big, early access is a red flag.
Edit: I’m realizing now that you probably meant it as in “paying more to play the game a couple days early,” and not the Steam definition of “releasing an incomplete game while you continually update it.”
I meant the latter. Satisfactory is still in Early Access 3+ years later. I doubt it’s even the most egregious.
Good or not, you’re saying it’s unfinished when you do that.
There are some stellar early access games. Valheim for example.
Wonder why, I was watching Lirik, shroud, and summit play it earlier and it honestly looked really good. I’m not 100% sold on the destiny/warframe-lite combat but the story is good and the writing is funny. Graphics are great as well, the cutscenes are gorgeous and there’s very little noticeable cutover between game and cutscene
I watched some gameplay and expected the worst, and i kinda liked the story. The writing isn’t fantastic but at least it’s not super cringe. And it looks pretty great, and runs fine apparently. But the combat is grade a boring. S crolled through 4 hours of gameplay and i saw 2 slightly different enemies. And aside from the story it was: go here, kill this. Go there, kill this. Good job.
Gameplay, movement, and shooting are all super fun. The story is silly, but exactly what you’d expect.
This is just clickbait. Yea, there was a bug for the first few people that changes their location to New Zealand to play early, but 99% of people did not experience that bug.
One of the biggest issues with Super Hero stories in general is they’ve all been told already. If a videogame does nothing to make its super hero story stand out, like letting you interact with the story in a unique way, it’s probably not worth the money, and it’s very likely not worth the time. If you are into super hero stories regardless of if there’s an ounce of originality, or if you’re into gameplay that is proven to be solid but also purely derivative of better games, then by all means go for it.