Slashdot Mirror


In Wake of Poor Reviews, Amazon Yanks SimCity Download

An anonymous reader writes with an excerpt from Geek.com: "In what must be a big blow for EA and Maxis, Amazon has stopped selling download copies of the just released SimCity. The game has at time of writing received 833 reviews on Amazon, and has an average rating of just one star. That's because 740 of those are one star reviews. Only 20 people gave it 5 stars. There's few better ways to gauge how a game has been received, and this is pretty damning as to how EA has handled the launch."

8 of 511 comments (clear)

  1. DRM by knetcomp · · Score: 5, Informative

    Use always-on, internet-requring DRM they said. It will work fine, they said.

    Sadly, EA will not admit DRM is the problem, they will just attribute it to "overwhelming demand".

    1. Re:DRM by Seumas · · Score: 5, Informative

      And when/if sales are lackluster because of the shit DRM or the shit quality of the game *itself*, they'll blame *that* on "piracy".

  2. Re:I wish I had pirated it lol by _KiTA_ · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...No you wouldn't. The *game logic* is on the server. You'd have to create your own server to play it. This makes it very hard to pirate, AND very tied to having a good internet connection even in "private" mode

    No, it's not. The game uses an extreme amount of CPU as it crunches those numbers itself, and the game continues to run even if your internet connection is lost. The only thing the server handles is the Facebook-like social gaming elements, and the save files.

    The "Oh, our server handles all the number crunching" was a bold faced lie by EA and Maxis, because that kind of number crunching would not be possible without a monthly fee to pay for server maintenance.

  3. Re:"Always on" is "Mostly Unusable For Several Wee by mythosaz · · Score: 5, Informative

    Biggest duds of the year? For whom? Certainly not Activision.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diablo_III#Sales

    Sales
    Before its release, Diablo III broke several presale records and became the most pre-ordered PC game to date on Amazon.com.[98] Activision Blizzard reported that Diablo III had broken the one-day PC sales records, accumulating over 3.5 million sales in the first 24 hours after release and over 6.3 million sales in its first week, including the 1.2 million people who obtained Diablo III through the World of Warcraft annual pass.[99] On its first day, the game amassed 4.7 million players worldwide, an estimate which includes those who obtained the game via the World of Warcraft annual pass.[99] In its second quarterly report, Diablo III was reported to have pushed Activision Blizzard's expectations. As of July 2012, more than 10 million people have played the game.[100] Diablo III remains the fastest selling PC game to date, and also one of the best-selling PC video games. As of the end of 2012, it had sold more than 12 million copies.[5]

    Certainly not from critics:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diablo_III#Critical_reception

    So unsuccessful that it was the 3rd best selling PC game of all time....

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_PC_video_games

  4. Re:Read the reviews yourself by Fallingcow · · Score: 5, Informative

    This ea support chat screencap posted in one of the reviews seems worth sharing far and wide, and judging from the way it ends I would guess the owner doesn't mind my posting it here.

  5. Re:Amazon is Giving Refunds to Opened/Installed Ga by esten · · Score: 5, Informative

    EA ruins game. Amazon saves day.

    I did this. Amazon was great. Return/refund is the only way EA will ever take a hint.

    I suggest:
    1. If you bought from Amazon return it. Amazon made it painless for full refund of my opened game.
    2. If bought from Orgin ask for refund. EA says in press release you can do this. Though I hear problems from customer service
    3. If you cannot get refund from Orgin/EA call credit card company and have them stop payment for defective product.

    Maybe EA will fix if this hurts their bottom line?

    If problems get fixed in a month or so you can always buy the game again. Otherwise not worth my time now to play with so many problems

  6. Re:Not sure... by Tridus · · Score: 5, Informative

    Amazon was getting bombarded by refund requests. That is why they pulled it. Selling it was costing them money.

    --
    -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
  7. Clarifying the "server-side calculation" confusion by razorshark · · Score: 5, Informative

    I think there needs to be some clarification as to the nature of why the game thinks it needs to be always online. Some people have suggested that ALL the computing and simulation logic happens on EA servers, but this isn't true.

    It has been shown that if you lose a net connection/connection to the server, the game will continue to run offline for about 20 minutes. During this time, YOUR city will continue to simulate properly. However, neighboring cities being developed by other people will freeze in time and be held in this state until such time that your connection is reestablished (if it doesn't before the timeout, the game session ends). Once it reconnects, the state of your neighbors is synced with your city and hence any changes to your neighbors' cities during the time you were offline will immediately be represented.

    If you connection drops, your city lives in isolation. Once it reconnects, it returns to the world and is affected by the effects of your neighbors. If you happen to be developing a city next to a tard who is polluting like crazy, your city will suffer the effects. That's the whole purpose of the always-online feature - to provide this MMO-style relationship between players. BUT, given the game runs fine with your city if the connection drops, this is bullshit because it means it should be trivial to enable the player to just play on their own.

    The simulation logic is there, available on the installed game. EA just doesn't feel it's worth having an offline mode despite it basically being readily set up for it - it thinks being interconnected with other players who might be dicks and ruin your city is much more important.

    --
    Raenex is a dickhead