From the other thread:
Tafdolphin wrote:Mafro wrote:And I'm sure I remember reading in a Jason Schreier article that it was Bungie's decision, not Activision's, to introduce microtransactions in Destiny 1 because it was easier to generate money that way rather than releasing more expansions. No reason to not believe that when he's been bang on about every single Destiny rumour.
It was Luke Smith's decision yes, but no choices are made in a vacuum. We don't know what metrics he was attempting to hit while making such decisions, nor what the terms were of the agreement with Activision. It's naive to see Bungie as nothing but a plucky underdog making games purely for fun, but I think everyone can agree that Activision are the worst of the two when it comes to shady money making.
If Schreier himself is excited, I think fans of the game ought to be also.
captain red dog wrote:strawberry float Destiny 3. I think the franchise is too badly soiled. Bungie should drop it and come up with something less generic.
And yeah, this is absolute nonsense. I had no loyalty or history with the series until a few months back and went in during the base-game giveaway expecting to play the campaign and leave. I've since played almost 200 hours based off nothing but how enjoyable it is in its current state. Yes Bungie strawberry floated up the launch, yes the first two expansions were disappointments, but Forsaken essentially WAS Destiny 3 and became one of my favourite games of the past few years.
Also, please redefine your definition of 'generic.'
captain red dog wrote:As I said in the Destiny thread. I think the franchise is beyond repair at this point. I don't see Destiny 3 being a success. They would be better off coming up with a new IP and cutting their losses.
'Beyond repair' here apparently meaning 'one of the biggest cash generators in the games industry.'
This is good news I think. As mentioned in the Videogames Bigger than Movies/Music thread, Activision is currently devouring itself at an incredible rate to appeal to shareholders and profit margins so, similar to their deal with Microsoft, leaving is a canny decision on Bungie's part.
I guess we'll see how much this actually affects their games come D3 but I'm excited.