| ▲ | CursedSilicon a day ago | |
I must admit I immediately questioned the credibility of the article when the author admitted they "aren't a gamer" and then started making allusions to vague political threads. Not to say these criticisms aren't valid, but they're a weird jumping off point The reality is none of the companies want to do these things. Every step in this process locks out some subset of customers. And that's not including the ones who meet the technical requirements but are turned off enough by the decision to just avoid the games anyway They're an unfortunate response to how utterly profitable and expansive cheating in online games has become. They cost the companies precious development time that could be spent making the game better to instead make it just vaguely "playable" for normal people | ||
| ▲ | orbital-decay 16 hours ago | parent [-] | |
>The reality is none of the companies want to do these things. (...) They're an unfortunate response to (...) This reasoning can be used to justify pretty arbitrary behavior, don't you think? Intent is irrelevant for malice, incentives are enough. | ||