Marvel Rivals is finally in player's hands, except the contract they have to sign to play the alpha technically doesn't let them say anything bad about it.
Lol Alpha tests are rarely for what they should be, which is testing core features of the game not yet finished. In reality, it's used to excuse negative aspects they have no plans of fixing.
Fuck em. Talk shit if you feel inclined to. Making you sign a contract otherwise is the peak of insecurities.
Sometimes Alpha has functions/features not being disclosed to public to keep some sort of advantage over another competitior release, and so an NDA is normal practise. I just had one in march for a software that has been around 40 years, i can't discuss or disclose any of its features until june. personally I would think telling customers the new stuff coming is a great selling feature, but there is industrial espionage so everytging is hush hush till release day
I disagree, people provide helpful reviews for closed beta games all the time. These help inform users on the trajectory of the development, core aspects of the story and main gameplay loop.
If you're exposing your game to the public, public opinion is expected and deserved.
Thats like reviewing chicken dinner before its fucking cooked. “Gee Bill, this chicken is really rubbery and gave me salmonella, I really think it’s going in the wrong direction. 3/10” jesus fuck we gotta review everything these days??
Alpha and beta aren't really the same though. Alpha is meant to be unstable and feature incomplete while beta is supposed to be simply missing polish. For Alpha reviews to have real value they need to provide that context. Otherwise, it's just an exercise for the reviewer
Betas are feature complete. Alphas are not. Reviewing a game that isn't even functionally completed is peak dumb. Reviewing it in beta is less dumb, but also a bit dumb because that's when a majority of major issues that could lower a review score are squashed.
Hmm. Maybe I’m thinking of California, and not the entire US. Still, I’m not sure a game company can just tell you to sign away your 1st Amendment rights and expect it to hold up in court.
They serve the desktop html to everyone. Text either doesn't fit the screen or you need to zoom out and then it's too small to read.
And the time difference is significant too. 1-2.5s original site, 3-10+s archive. It's a worse experience, especially if you have adblock on.
What's wrong with giving the original link as default? That way not only would everyone have a good experience (and those who use adblock or a proxy / custom front-end etc would get the experience they expect), but all that traffic wouldn't unnecessarily burden the chosen archive site neither. Again, put it in the body if you want.
There's a treat for you.
If you're using mobile Firefox on the loaded archive.org page there's should be a small icon [a square with 3 lines, resemble a written page] on the input url address. If you click it you get a very special page with just the article text tailored perfectly to your screen... with few added benefit: no ads, if your smartphone is set to dark mode, the content will tuned so, no java to track your mouse position (needed for advertiser) etc.
Pages recorded with archive.org will always work with Firefox's reader view (somewebsite are catching up and blocking this mode). Basically you get the best of... nearly everything.
(on desktop it's [ctrl][alt][r])
Can we not link archives in post link section?
If you access from Europe you get a "cookie wall" (which I don't think it's EU compliant): basically give you three options:
accept all the advertsment cookies form... basically everyone (ads company, google, fb... anyway to sell your data)
pay subscription
get the hell out.
..basically a troll fine on the top of the bridge.
anyway, on the archive.org saved page you also get the online address too.
Basically you get the best of... nearly everything.
But I don't get the best of everything. I get the experience you want to have, which is not the same as mine. I don't want to wait forever for the archive to dig the site out if nobody has accessed it the last few minutes. I don't want to have to use Firefox reader mode to have an acceptable experience. Not to mention that you can use reader view with most sites themselves and get all its benefits anyways.
I don't want compulsory ad blocking. I know hating online publications in hip here but maybe I want them to survive so I don't want to block their ads. And conversely I don't want to put unnecessary traffic on archive websites from everyone going through them to read the article as opposed to only the people that want to.
If you access from Europe you get a "cookie wall" (which I don't think it's EU compliant)
I'm not from eu and that's not the prompt I got. It only had accept and manage buttons and the manage button opened a thing that had a reject all button.
on the archive.org saved page you also get the online address too.
If the archive link wasn't the default (and only) option you wouldn't need to use reader mode or get the address from the archive (and waste time doing so) to get back to a good experience. Like I said, put the archive in the body if you want so that people have options, but don't make it default.