Reasonable said:
I disagree completely. Take Bioshock. It launched as a 360 exclusive, every impression given was that it wasn't ever going to be on the PS3. At the time that was the only impression given, and it was misleading as it was coming to the PS3 after a period of contracted exclusivity which forced this information to be withheld from the buying public. This sort of thing has to be judged as it was, not in retrospect when we know it was timed. I think you know as well as I the impression given in these cases, particularly early on before it became apparent that many of these so called exclusives were in fact only timed. Even with DLC such as GTAIV the impression is that the DLC is for 360 only, paid for by MS, etc. then low and behold it's not - it was timed. This misleads the consumer, period, which is why it is a poor business practice, whoever does it, whether Sony with Ghostbusters in Europe or MS with titles like Bioshock globally. It's clear many people thought these titles/DLC would never hit the PS3 and were therefore mislead by the nature of the timed exclusive - look at the Japanese resoponse to ToV, etc. in that region I'd say once the whole timed approach was exposed it hurt the 360's brand due to the negative perception of the tactic. Those consumers sure felt mislead. It's not whether for that period it's only available on one platform, it's the fact it's known to be coming to another and that fact is surpressed that clearly misleads.
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You talk about impressions as if they're factual statements given by a company, but people assume whatever they want from these impressions. It shouldn't be on the company to lay everything out for you cut and dry, especially when such things would hurt their business.
Just like when companies like Sony almost lie to their investors "We'll turn profit next quarter". They spin it so that they can restore investor confidence. MS doesn't even spin anything (in regards to this exclusive thing at least), they just omit certain things. Spinning the truth, or omitting parts of the truth, which do you really think is worse?
As for the Japanese response thing, the Japanese seem to hate everything MS anyways. It doesn't matter what they do over there, the Japanese will probably never trust MS anyways, which is just silly to me.
In the end, all companies do whatever they can to get ahead. Even Sony and Nintendo and plenty of other companies resort to these tactics. At the end of the day, mostly all that matters is money. As long as you understand and appreciate that, then something like this whole timed exclusive thing shouldn't even faze you.
MS haters will always be MS haters, and they like these sorts of things to justify their disdain. Most people don't even care about all this. "Oh Bioshock is on PS3 now? Cool"