I think I’ll cancel my preorder. I wasn’t that firm on it anyway and this is just distasteful. Might as well wait for a GotY edition I can get for 20 bucks next year.
I think I’ll cancel my preorder. I wasn’t that firm on it anyway and this is just distasteful. Might as well wait for a GotY edition I can get for 20 bucks next year.
But they didn’t agree with her enough to accept the terms of the union to pay her royalties for her voice, so...they don’t really agree with her at all, do they.
So in this case, the question is whether or not the EULA gives companies creator-rights over things people create using their game. I can see a judge not wanting to make a one-off decision and leaving it to a jury because it could set a lot of precedents. Blizzard owns the assets, yes, but do they own the *concept* of…
The game is much, MUCH better than the demo. More things explained, for one, the battles feel a bit better, everything is a bit more balanced...
I was meh at the demo too, but I kept my preorder and honestly I’m having a great time with the full game.
This doesn’t have anything to do with ‘accurate reviews.’ Steam doesn’t get as much money when you buy the game somewhere else and activate it. They want you to buy the game directly from them.
So now, unless you do, it won’t count.