Either don't pirate or don't complain.
Please, tar
everyone with the same brush. Make the same sort of sweeping generalisations that CliffyB did and that have gotten the response in this thread (and if other fora are an indication, similar responses across the web...)
I don't see that pirates have a right to criticize Epic or any other dev for this.
Neither do I. Pirates have no right to criticise Epic or EA or anyone else for their stance. However, the legitimate purchasers
do.
Furthermore, to anyone who objects to his comments, I challenge you to prove his comments wrong by telling me that you know about gaming PC parts and yet do not know about torrenting.
Paddy proved that. Oh well. Oh, but then someone told him the basics. So he now knows how (in theory) and has a high-end PC.
But by your logic above,
you're a pirate too. I mean, you have high technical knowledge about computers, and I also presume you know about torrenting. So you've just fallen victim yourself of the patent pending 'CliffyB shotgun effect', when you're actually defending him.
Wasn't that the case with all the piracy related topics we had in the past? :wink: :lol:
Pretty much.
Then how did he say it incorrectly, why was that incorrect, and how should he have said it instead?
Not sure how he should have put it, but his shotgun tactics at the whole high-end PC market were not well considered.
The Alienware-buying public buy Alienware because they don't have high technical knowledge. So under the 'technical knowledge' argument, they don't know enough to torrent. So he's attacked innocents. Conversely, those with high technical knowledge, and therefore likely knowledge of torrenting, don't always own ultra-high-end rigs. So he's missed some targets there. But his argument is basically money = technical knowledge. If only it were that easy.
...guess that's why he's a games designer and not a politician. :lol:
The only "action" I can think of that would do anything at all to reduce piracy is to sue the pirates. Is this really better than simply abandoning the PC market? I don't know, but by and large the game devs seem to think it isn't.
Four major things could be done:
- Tighten down who has access to the Gold master copy; no pre-release piracy.
- Worldwide simultaneous release.
- Go after the 'scene'... they're the ones that crack the games.
- Make legal copies more desirable than illegal ones.
Hm. This returns to the same old debate, and one I'm going to withdraw from after this. However, since I'd already been involved in this thread, I am going to leave it in the hands of one of the Moderators who is not involved to close it down when they view it has gone on long enough.