It's a symbiotic relationship
It's a symbiotic relationship
It's a symbiotic relationship
It’s fine. I am obviously going to play these 63 games I have never downloaded.
The trick is to download the games until your drive is full. Then you need to finish them to free up some space.
Try hundreds
At least Steam is taking steps to make sure you don't buy a shitty cash grab by labeling Early Access games that haven't been updated in a while.
Good thing the next Assassin's Creed won't be unfinished, it's not like they have to release immediately or their parent company will go bankrupt or something like that.
If there's a day 1 patch for big game releases, it's the same as early access. Going gold means bullshit nowadays.
You hit a point where you realize you spent too much on games
Early Access is a fucking blight on the marketplace
it's a double edged sword really,
it allows some games to get enough funding to be finished. indi devs can basically start with a strong demo & then work on their project with an actual budget
and it allows other games to never be finished and still sold, indi devs can start strong, and then give up, and still make passive income out of people who don't scroll down to reviews to check if people aren't complaining about the game being abandoned, or in forever-early-acess-hell
Caveat emptor
I've not been upset with any of the Early Access games I've purchased, because I make sure to research the game before I buy. Just off the top of my head, factorio, satisfactory, and rimworld are all games that I purchased in early access and made it to full release and were worth a purchase well before release. Hell, even games like Dyson Sphere Program hasn't been fully released and I've gotten more time out of that then multiple full games.
It should be marketed as beta test. I get not wanting to give out game for free or needing some funding to finish it, but its still an unfishished product.
IMO it should be something like so;
Just throwing out a few ideas, trying to keep it fair to both dev and player, but obviously I'm not a game business expert.
Without really access we wouldn't have Baldur's Gate 3. It's a system that can be abused, sure, but it's one of the few tools available for indie devs to be able to make larger scale games on scales that can compete with the big guys.
Poor impulse control. Join us patient gamers.