kane_magus (
kane_magus) wrote2023-05-03 01:26 pm
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Entry tags:
"PC gamers are getting really, really fed up with one sh*tty port after another"
"It sure seems like there's something wrong with practically every major big-budget release on PC these days."
Yeah, no fucking shit, Sherlock. Ya think?
It's funny that the article mentions Dark Souls: Prepare to Die Edition as if the time of its release is some bygone era we should return to... when the Prepare to Die Edition of Dark Souls itself became a thing mainly because the original release of Dark Souls on PC was... yes, you guessed it... a bug-filled, broken, nigh-unplayable mess that required fan-patches to fix, too. So, really, Dark Souls: Prepare to Die Edition is just the bare minimum baseline for what video game companies should be doing to rectify the bug-filled, broken, nigh-unplayable messes that they release (on PC or any other platform). But they aren't really doing that, are they? Which is why the release of something like Dark Souls: Prepare to Die Edition is such a rare thing and why it is so lauded, rather than what should just be merely expected, in light of what came before.
In any case, if video game consumers didn't keep guzzling down bug-filled, broken, nigh-unplayable messes on release or, worse, via preorder, as if that diarrhea was water and they were dying of thirst in a desert (regardless of any whinging after the fact they may do), then video game companies would stop releasing bug-filled, broken, nigh-unplayable messes. Because, obviously, the "whinging after the fact" clearly isn't working, at all. It really is as simple as that.
Yeah, no fucking shit, Sherlock. Ya think?
It's funny that the article mentions Dark Souls: Prepare to Die Edition as if the time of its release is some bygone era we should return to... when the Prepare to Die Edition of Dark Souls itself became a thing mainly because the original release of Dark Souls on PC was... yes, you guessed it... a bug-filled, broken, nigh-unplayable mess that required fan-patches to fix, too. So, really, Dark Souls: Prepare to Die Edition is just the bare minimum baseline for what video game companies should be doing to rectify the bug-filled, broken, nigh-unplayable messes that they release (on PC or any other platform). But they aren't really doing that, are they? Which is why the release of something like Dark Souls: Prepare to Die Edition is such a rare thing and why it is so lauded, rather than what should just be merely expected, in light of what came before.
In any case, if video game consumers didn't keep guzzling down bug-filled, broken, nigh-unplayable messes on release or, worse, via preorder, as if that diarrhea was water and they were dying of thirst in a desert (regardless of any whinging after the fact they may do), then video game companies would stop releasing bug-filled, broken, nigh-unplayable messes. Because, obviously, the "whinging after the fact" clearly isn't working, at all. It really is as simple as that.