it always fascinates me when threads go on and on pontificating about the possible reasons for said piece of news when the reason is incredibly obvious.
Sony is a business.
This would be a service that (in)directly competes with +.
Therefore they decided not to offer it.
Really the only negative I can see is how they handled the whole thing. There was no need to make a statement. This was no doubt a case where things would have been better off not said.
It goes both ways but its an age old argument. Imagine a PS4 that didnt launch with Madden, FIFA, Battlefield, etc. while its competitor did.....
What in PSNow or PS+ equates to publisher-by-publisher subscriptions and the possibility of content locked behind paywalls? I understand digital is the future, but knowing that doesnt mean we should actively work to accelerate that future
Wow this thread exploded while I was feverishly sleeping off this vile flu. Has some other news come out? Can somebody fill me in or sum things up?
I really don't get all this "I'm glad Sony didn't bother" reaction. If you don't like EA or the program fine. I get that. But why wouldn't you want the choice?
If anything, if you HATE EA, wouldn't you want the choice on PlayStation so that you could actually vote with your wallet by NOT buying in?
Just my thought on it.
LOL no I was responding to the argument being made of who needs who more (EA/Sony).Are you suggesting that everyone would be ok with that?
Let's look at the sales:
For PS4, its top 5 games sold so far consist of
4 from 3rd party:
COD, Watch Dogs, FIFA, and Battlefield.
For X1, its top 5 sold games consist of 4 3rd party games:
Titanfall, COD, Battlefield and Dead Rising 3.
3rd party supports are crucial in today's game industry and it isn't very wise to undermine them by saying "Sony doesn't need EA, EA needs Sony."
My point is EA doesn't need Sony to sell their games. (flipping the table to play devils advocate). 3rd party publishers have the upper hand in today's game market. Gamers follow where the games are. Not where the TFLOPS are.
This. To be frank, Sony's statement doesn't make much sense and is as if they are hiding something, and this is it. They evaluated the service and then decided they did not want to introduce it to compete with their own. PS + is a big initiative for them and they want to increase its profits as reported by Sony CEOs and analysts.
Good Sony is taking a stand.. For all we know Ubisoft might be planning their own subscription type deal if EA gets big mobey out of theirs, and then it will be the norm for all publishers..
Why you don't have to pay for a year? Much like ps+ . In terms of a month by month proposition it shits all over + august offerings , same as gwg
Some people think EA will drop Sony if they dont play ball and make their own console.
People arguing FOR this subscription model have ZERO vision, ZERO forethought.
More options are not better when they lead to further fragmentation.
"Comcast asks me to pay 10 more dollars for faster Netflix, why isn't having that OPTION better for me as a consumer?"
How insane would you have to be to even consider owning a console made by EA?
Some people think EA will drop Sony if they dont play ball and make their own console.
People arguing FOR this subscription model have ZERO vision, ZERO forethought.
More options are not better when they lead to further fragmentation.
"Comcast asks me to pay 10 more dollars for faster Netflix, why isn't having that OPTION better for me as a consumer?"
lol, sure. This is exactly like the net-neutrality debate.
I really don't get all this "I'm glad Sony didn't bother" reaction. If you don't like EA or the program fine. I get that. But why wouldn't you want the choice?
If anything, if you HATE EA, wouldn't you want the choice on PlayStation so that you could actually vote with your wallet by NOT buying in?
Just my thought on it.
I really don't get all this "I'm glad Sony didn't bother" reaction. If you don't like EA or the program fine. I get that. But why wouldn't you want the choice?
If anything, if you HATE EA, wouldn't you want the choice on PlayStation so that you could actually vote with your wallet by NOT buying in?
Just my thought on it.
EA doesn't operate that way. They don't just suddenly cut support.Refresh my memory.
The Wii-U bombing cost EA dearly. Dropping the platform like a hot rock was a business move. Nothing more.
The PS4 is currently expected to be the market leader of the generation. There is money to be had on the platform, lots of it.
These aren't decisions made on "who wants to kill this company" or "I really hate that company, let's fuck them over". These are numbers speaking, and it's why they won't abandon the PS4 anytime soon.
Explain..
Explain..
You say that as if protectionism isn't already at the very heart of business model for these kind of services. Like we didn't already have total segregation between XBL and PSN.
The "choice" here is the same as it has ever been. Pick a platform. Or don't and buy them all because gamer street cred >>>> having money.
I really don't get all this "I'm glad Sony didn't bother" reaction. If you don't like EA or the program fine. I get that. But why wouldn't you want the choice?
If anything, if you HATE EA, wouldn't you want the choice on PlayStation so that you could actually vote with your wallet by NOT buying in?
Just my thought on it.
People arguing FOR this subscription model have ZERO vision, ZERO forethought.
More options are not better when they lead to further fragmentation.
"Comcast asks me to pay 10 more dollars for faster Netflix, why isn't having that OPTION better for me as a consumer?"
They did it to Dreamcast and SaturnEA doesn't operate that way. They don't just suddenly cut support.
If that occurs and sales of EA games on PS4 take a nosedive, I would fully support Sony revoking their dev/pub license from the company, 100%. Would send a good message, no company's too big to get shut out if they don't play ball.They cut corners, ship sloppily-made products to gradually degrade interest in buying their games on that particular platform, prioritize a "lead SKU"... all while showing "full support".
Not supporting Steam costs EA a lot too, but they don't even bat a damn eyelash over that. Not offering Access to PlayStation customers also costs EA. If the situation is due to not coming to terms with Sony, they have means of recourse that have been implemented before while still making claims of "full support" that don't drastically hurt their bottom line.
Been thinking of reasons why Sony might be reluctant to allow this ( at least at this stage). People saying they're being anti-consumer by denying choice are, IMO, not thinking things through, merely knee-jerking. Sony aren't likely to deprive users of a service that might benefit the ecosystem as a whole, therefore we have to look for the potential for harm.
i. Firstly it obviously competes with and potentially devalues ps+ (you'd have to think EA games would be less likely to become available to plus, or potentially they could be even more outdated versions of the sports titles).
ii. End user support. For the tiny fraction of the fee Sony would receive, they'd be expected to manage the purchase and delivery as with any digital purchase, but the fact that it's not just a single transaction for a single item and rather the support of a yearly or monthly subscription service, opens the door to many more potential issues.
Sony would be the first point of call for end user support when anything went wrong (and with ea/origin on top of ps+, that might not be trivial). Reading the many threads on GAF, I'm sure Sony's CS support lines are busy enough as is regarding the various issues that are thrown up with with their own ps+ without generating more with an extra layer of potential pitfalls on top. There would no doubt be grey areas - problems where Sony think it's an EA issue, EA think it's a Sony issue. Not appetising.
iii. It's not just EA - you have to think further ahead. Other publishers are likely to expect to be able to be given the chance to offer a competing (but maybe not even necessarily that similar) service for their own titles. This would not only multiply the effects of the above concerns but, thinking it through a bit more, you'd have to factor in each publisher's competing service's rules, regulations and nuances... and you are now presenting an even more complex problem for Sony CS.
Taking this further, it's not difficult to imagine the potential for a sea of confusion customer-side when Johnny Gamer expects certain things of one service that is actually only a part of a rival service he also subscribes to. This would only compound with every new service added. All customers would go directly to Sony to air their grievances and have their minds set at ease. Those CS staff are going to spend the next few years in and out of training courses like an mcse.
iii. Having to set up an auto-renewal with a credit card held on file. Sony don't really want to go there, do they? And that Johnny Gamer guy - what if he forgets to cancel and the service auto-renews - Sony CS have to deal with enough "my dog bought COD Ghosts when it scratched its arse on my DS4 help me please!" kind of gripes as it is.
So those were some possible reasons are why I reckon Sony isn't keen to want to walk this path, there are likely many more I can't comprehend not being in a position to understand. It's more understandable why Microsoft, struggling as they appear to be to hang on to the coat tails of ps4, are more open to a roll of the dice with their comfortable bedfellows in this extending of an unprecedented relationship;-)
The current setup with ps+ is actually the best for the consumer in my view. Sony is the platform holder - they have their store and their services. Keeping that simple and uniform for customers is key. Having ps+ with the potential for any and all publishers competing for exposure through this single subscription service is true competition between rival publishers and it keeps things dead simple for the end user. No nested bullshit.
Several "competing" publisher-exclusive services would appear to me to be be anti-competitive and funnel gamers into a more fractured and uncertain gaming-as-a-service future.
Away from Sony and on a personal level - the TOS on the EA site reads significantly differently to a few random EA spokespersons' comments I've seen quotes in this and the other thread over the past 24 hours (regarding expiration of titles and purchases made using the 10% discount). There's ambiguity there. Tweets and e-mails to gaming sites aren't good enough - the ToS needs to be edited to reassure. It's entirely reasonable to expect EA to stick to the letter of their TOS and not some quote given to gaming Website X or a tweet from some guy who might no longer even work for EA any longer. EA don't really have the gravitas to ensure faith in their future generosity or ability to play fair.
The discount thing is thrown in there as a deal clincher. At 10% it is fairly measly vs the actual retail price paid for physical copies (here in UK at least) and for it to have much benefit as a DLC discount the user would have to be a serious content-hoover, and I can't see that very niche kind of consumer being too thrifty. The time-limited game trials some 120 hours before release I can see appealing to a hardcore minority hell-bent on getting their hands on EA's latest offerings as soon as humanly possible.
Some people think EA will drop Sony if they dont play ball and make their own console.
I don't understand the controversy here. We've all been boycotting EA games for years now, haven't we?
God dammit did I miss a memo somewhere along the way?
Some people think EA will drop Sony if they dont play ball and make their own console.
My speculation is that Sony is concerned that PS+ will be significantly devalued if they offer EA Access.
If PS4 gets EA Access, Plus can pretty much kiss EA games goodbye from ever being on Plus discount, free games,etc.
this sets a precedent for publishers in the future. if this takes off we'll see UBI, Square, Activision and others adopt this tactic and we could see even more content locked behind these new services. we already have content being split between retailers, consoles, and pre-orders. it will be the same for this too.
hey, if the consumers don't see this coming a mile away and stop it now I we'll only have ourselves to blame.
Oh did you read what the contract was about exactly and the actual reasoning behind it or are you talking out of your ass?#4theplayers*
*we decide everything for them.
I understand Sony position, they have Ps+ and Ps now. They want all the Psn monopoly relative to games, period.
Because some of us don't really see how this removes all that much choice, relatively speaking. I'm not sure why we're supposed to automatically feel substantially deprived because a company repackages products they already have which can already be obtained in other ways under some new service offering that, for the moment, can only be gotten here but not there...I mean, if game industry customers were truly this sensitive about "choice" and "options", this whole market should have imploded by now.I really don't get all this "I'm glad Sony didn't bother" reaction. If you don't like EA or the program fine. I get that. But why wouldn't you want the choice?
Oh did you read what the contract was about exactly and the actual reasoning behind it or are you talking out of your ass?