InfiniteBento
Member
ahahahaha that's fantastic.
Also Bgamer90, you are the guy who would not believe that PS4 wouldn't require an internet connection, even after it was repeatedly explained by Sony higher ups before the conference.
You were very adamant in this thread:
Mark Cerny: "PlayStation 4 won't require to be always connected"
Yet you are taking what two MS employees (and Geis) are saying as gospel after the 180 (thus they can claim it was anything).
Want to believe this but at the same time it fits typical PR vagueness.
LOL! I can't wrap my head around this. Seriously? People want to be chained and whatnot and for what? I can't even give an example as to why this would benefit gamers.
And yes, that "family sharing" thing was a pipedream. If that was really their solution, wouldn't announcing that at E3 or when this whole mess started alleviated this? Heck, we've contacted MS PR countless times and didn't even hear a peep.
If MS was restricting secondhand sales, what on earth makes you think they'll allow 10 friggin' people to buy just ONE game and share it among themselves? You don't even need to be good at business to know that's one weird logic.
It's like a movie company announcing you can't resell or loan your movies but you'll be able to share it with 20 people with no charge. It's so damn ridiculous I can't believe people think that was ever going to happen.
No way in hell MS won't pimp that stuff out if it was their intent.
ahahahaha that's fantastic.
https://twitter.com/aegies/status/347748309550645249
Then some statements from MS like this: http://www.neowin.net/news/microsoft-xbox-one-family-game-share-was-never-time-limited
I wish they would give users the option to have one DRM setup or the other.
I personally would opt to go digital or install my games (with a one-time use code) and get the benefits of the family sharing and such.
If you want to go with buying and selling physical games, just buy the game and don't use the code.
Everyone gets what they want and hopefully (but not very likely) everyone stops complaining.
Also Bgamer90, you are the guy who would not believe that PS4 wouldn't require an internet connection, even after it was repeatedly explained by Sony higher ups before the conference.
You were very adamant in this thread:
Mark Cerny: "PlayStation 4 won't require to be always connected"
Yet you are taking what two MS employees (and Geis) are saying as gospel after the 180 (thus they can claim it was anything).
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Great "source". Might as well have just posted a picture of your ass for us.
Untill it's by a corporation you have an emotional attachment towards
Console warriors, come out and playyeeeeeeeaaayyyyy.
And what would stop you from selling/giving that disc away to someone (who hasn't chosen the stricter DRM option) once you've installed it?
Two completely different things.
Funny how you used that as me defending MS when MS was exactly the reason why I wanted to (at the time) see the PS4's online plans in more detail.
FYI, I didn't believe the family share plan until more articles came out about it; pre & post the DRM reversal.
What articles though? All the information out there pointing to the family plan being the full games are Twitter tweets.
Still not going to believe it as true until someone from ubisoft or EA etc. actually says "Yes we would've allowed Family Sharing" but I guess that's asking for too much and will likely never be discussed
I still think the demo thing was likely the first iteration of family sharing and then when MS say the writing on the wall they tried to make it full game sharing (maybe)
Still very suspicious that it wasn't finalized by E3 so I find it hard to believe this was to be in the original feature set of the X1
Can only imagine the box we would get if people hadn't complained at all
I still to this day don't get why MS didn't go into more detail about it at their E3 conference. I mean, the blog they had about the Xbox One's restrictions from the week (or so) before went into more detail about the family share plan in comparison to what they stated about it at E3.
That was true for other features too such as game multitasking (which now after the "180" is just for digital games). Overall they did a terrible job in explaining the features of the system in my opinion.
Recap: in the wake of the IGDA party dancer scandal, unsubstantiated Twitter rumors surface about women being paid to be in the VIP room of a Mojang party, apparently too attractive and numerous to possibly be there of their own volition (sexism much?). Mojang flatly deny claim and the source of the rumors is rooted out, essentially a game of Twitter Telephone, but a delusional feminist extremist crusader decrees that Notch is still at fault for people thinking that they were paid for even if they weren't, and that he should take some sort of action in reparation. Arthur Gies takes her side and promotes her on Twitter.
The OP is permed for going on a witch hunt (in conjunction with insane extremist posts afterwards) and refusing to update his thread after the attempt at scandal fell apart. Libelous, agenda-driven bullshit.
Arthur Gies is officially the most disreputable person in the enthusiast press.
That's not true
There's some articles as well........about those tweets
Honestly would love to be able to ask pubs/devs questions from time to time and just get a straight answer
The idea that MS was still in discussion with pubs about family sharing (if true) is mind-boggling to me
I didn't say you were defending MS, I said you were taking what they said as gospel when you yourself said in that thread that PR speak is vague nonsense and not to be trusted.
What articles though? All the information out there pointing to the family plan being the full games are Twitter tweets (post 180 at that).
To take it one step further: let's assume that Cboat was wrong and the family share plan was going to be this wonderful thing that let you link up with any 10 people and just pass games back and forth all willy-nilly.
Why, exactly, did MS pull this off the table after their DRM 180? Were they butthurt and just looking to punish everybody? Did they just not want to give us too much awesome at once?
To take it one step further: let's assume that Cboat was wrong and the family share plan was going to be this wonderful thing that let you link up with any 10 people and just pass games back and forth all willy-nilly.
Why, exactly, did MS pull this off the table after their DRM 180? Were they butthurt and just looking to punish everybody? Did they just not want to give us too much awesome at once?
If you could share both online and offline, then why not just sell the disk once you've linked it to your account?
So many people have said this, but I don't understand the confusion. Obviously without DRM online sharing wouldn't be possible, the licence needs to be restricted to a single account if you want online sharing to be a possibility. If you could share both online and offline, then why not just sell the disk once you've linked it to your account? It would work since there wouldn't be any DRM, so the system basically enables piracy for the masses. It makes absolutely no sense for both to be implemented.
But of course nobody here cares. Sony is king etc etc
I never said "nonsense" and "not to be trusted". I just said that to me it was vague and that I wanted to see more info of their full online plans; just like I wanted to see/read more details about the family share plan shortly after I found out about it after MS' E3 conference.
These interviews came out before the tweets.:
http://arstechnica.com/gaming/2013/06/microsoft-defends-the-xbox-ones-licensing-used-game-policies/
http://penny-arcade.com/report/arti...ames-with-ten-family-members-but-some-details
The question is how many people can play the game at the same time. Spencer told me he believed that two people can play one copy of a game concurrently, but he urged me to check Microsoft's official wording on the matter to be sure. This is what the licensing page states:
Where in those articles does it "shut down" the speculation that it wouldn't be full game sharing?
So many people have said this, but I don't understand the confusion. Obviously without DRM online sharing wouldn't be possible, the licence needs to be restricted to a single account if you want online sharing to be a possibility. If you could share both online and offline, then why not just sell the disk once you've linked it to your account? It would work since there wouldn't be any DRM, so the system basically enables piracy for the masses. It makes absolutely no sense for both to be implemented.
But of course nobody here cares. Sony is king etc etc
Yes, you could have full shared games with up to ten people. They removed that when they reversed the DRM.
https://twitter.com/aarongreenberg/statuses/348125219019436033
Most of the speculation came after those articles were posted.
Those articles still read to me though that it was going to be full games; especially the one from ars technica.
This has been shut down. It was full games.
They never made clear exactly how family sharing would work. Such a system would be quite easy to abuse if there weren't restrictions. There had to be some kind of restrictions to it.
It seems clear that the benefits to them outweighed the benefits to the consumer. On the subject of used games specifically, a policy was being put in place that would affect every game bought. After the negative reception, they pushed it all on to the publishers. If the publishers wanted to though, they could have completely blocked the sharing and selling of games anyway. And it was very easy for them to do, because the necessary tools to do so were built into the system.
I am scratching my head at this whole 'future of gaming' bullshit. Basically the only new and definite thing it added to the user experience is the ability to play games without a disc in the drive. Wow, fucking wow. Family sharing sounded interesting, but there were some serious question marks on how that would really work. Digital downloads are still an option, but then it is an option for PS4 owners as well. There is hardly anything this policy brought to the table that you can't already do.
I'm pretty sure it was full games with 10 people. Also MS said this was the first step to cheaper games, so we were probably going to have $30-40 games instead of $60 games as well. My plans were to share every new release game with 9 of my friends and only pay $3-4 a game. Now all those plans have gone up in smoke. Hell yes, I signed the petition.
If it was actually going to be this, they would have explicitly said so.
I'm pretty sure it was full games with 10 people. Also MS said this was the first step to cheaper games, so we were probably going to have $30-40 games instead of $60 games as well. My plans were to share every new release game with 9 of my friends and only pay $3-4 a game. Now all those plans have gone up in smoke. Hell yes, I signed the petition.
They did, Aaron Greenberg said it explicitly. He has zero reasons to lie. That's basically an official statement from MS. Official statement from MS = truthfact.
I'm pretty sure it was full games with 10 people. Also MS said this was the first step to cheaper games, so we were probably going to have $30-40 games instead of $60 games as well.
My plans were to share every new release game with 9 of my friends and only pay $3-4 a game. Now all those plans have gone up in smoke. Hell yes, I signed the petition.
They did, Aaron Greenberg said it explicitly. He has zero reasons to lie. That's basically an official statement from MS. Official statement from MS = truthfact.
Post 180, they can say anything. Why didn't they say it pre-180, especially in that press release they sent out or during E3? Because they still hadn't figured it all out is my guess. They can claim the world now that they killed it.
I'm pretty sure it was full games with 10 people. Also MS said this was the first step to cheaper games, so we were probably going to have $30-40 games instead of $60 games as well. My plans were to share every new release game with 9 of my friends and only pay $3-4 a game. Now all those plans have gone up in smoke. Hell yes, I signed the petition.