- Joined
- Apr 20, 2019
and allow epic to claim they're friendly to devs. they're only getting sympathy bucks from retarded journalists thoughI'm pretty sure this Ooblets thing was intentional. Piss off gamers -> Garner sympathy bucks.
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and allow epic to claim they're friendly to devs. they're only getting sympathy bucks from retarded journalists thoughI'm pretty sure this Ooblets thing was intentional. Piss off gamers -> Garner sympathy bucks.
I wonder if devs cried because Epic producers or even CEO had a tough talk with them. They can talk all they want about bad gamers and support in public, but i dont think Epic was sweet and supportive in a private chat with devs.and allow epic to claim they're friendly to devs. they're only getting sympathy bucks from exceptional journalists though
that's the point. they assumed people would come for the small indies or the free games. and then a different kind of more generic people would show up for ones like borderlands 3. which isn't a bad strategy, people will come for the games. it is a shit strategy when you alienate literally every potential user by calling them assholes though.this talk about "we support the devs" means jack shit if you piss off all the customers and they leave
sorry, but i'd be willing to take a cut just so i can get more people to find my product
to buy my product without their credit card companies freaking out because epic is too lazy to make a cart
and epic can baby all the devs they want, but if no one buys the games, it means shit
honestly if devs complain about it being too expensive to put stuff on steam they can just use game jolt. shit's freecan't wait when game journos will say that new steam thing is anti-dev, and poor indie devs can't use steam to promote their games here before moving to epic store![]()
Good. Stay off Steam if you're just gonna use it for free advertising before jumping ship.No they don't actually. Or, well, didn't. ...Okay, to answer your questions: this is supposed to act as a stopgap for two things.
1.) Developers constantly taking their games off of Steam. If they decide to move over, they'll now have to contact Valve to set the Steam release date as indefinite and weed out anyone moving to Epic. If they don't do that, Steamwork's backend won't work right and start sending e-mails/release news on the day it was set to release without it actually releasing (causing bad PR for both the developers and, up until today, Steam). And if they can't give a good enough reason/they tell them nothing, the game's now liable for removal from the storefront (meaning no more using and abusing Steam's features in the absence of Epic's, and no more free marketing via Steam without a good reason).
2.) People who abuse the New and Trending Tab/the Steam algorithm. Now you can't constantly change the release dates to abuse the algorithm every month, You need to contact Valve first, and you need to give them and the Steam staff directly a reason as to why you keep shifting release goalposts. So yes, now there's an exposure penalty.
Kills two birds with one stone.
All of these indie morons have to do is say something like "We took the Epic deal because we are a small team and it ensures we can continue to make games in the future. We know many of you have issues with the Epic store, but please understand and continue to support us."
Read the room you goddamn idiots. People will still be pissy, but there will be way less kicking and screaming if you toss the customers a softball
This had better blow up online because this is absolutely horrendous.To ever so slightly shift gears to another Epic games exclusive... i have never heard of this guy as i stopped following Borderlands after, y'know, Anthony Burch. I was momentarily interested in 3, and then they announced that was gonna be Epic Exclusive too, so fuck that.
So... let's play pretend game. Say you're a games publisher. There's a guy who figured out to follow your private Twitch account because you fucked up and showed it on public stream. Then you use that compromised account to stream Borderlands 3 before its out. Then let's say potentially there's a Youtuber who uses that content to create hype and rumors that might positively affect sales.
What would you do in this situation?
A: Nothing.
B: Send them an email asking them not to show the private content.
C: Cease and Desist letter
D: Falsely copyright strike 7 of their videos, ensure that their Discord account, and channel gets removed, and send 2 private investigators to antagonize and question them.
Can you guess what Take Two did?
Has the entire game industry just collectively decided to become stupid, because anyone with even an Iota of a brain cell could see that basically torching some semi popular YouTuber over some video would be extremely bad PR.
All of these indie morons have to do is say something like "We took the Epic deal because we are a small team and it ensures we can continue to make games in the future. We know many of you have issues with the Epic store, but please understand and continue to support us."
Read the room you goddamn idiots. People will still be pissy, but there will be way less kicking and screaming if you toss the customers a softball.
Japan alone seems to remember the saying don't shit where you eat.Has the entire game industry just collectively decided to become stupid, because anyone with even an Iota of a brain cell could see that basically torching some semi popular YouTuber over some video would be extremely bad PR.
except for their complete disregard for fair use on youtube and the like.Japan alone seems to remember the saying don't shit where you eat.
We're overdue for another crash to teach these cocksuckers a lesson.
Has the entire game industry just collectively decided to become stupid, because anyone with even an Iota of a brain cell could see that basically torching some semi popular YouTuber over some video would be extremely bad PR.
The term "trade secret" gets thrown around as if it means something here, but there is no legal precedent for protecting software trade secrets anywhere in the world that i could find with an hour of looking. Someone taking your "trade secret" does not bestow you any rights to any action, but paying someone to intimidate an individual does open you up to even a class action lawsuit.