Akvod said:
Yes, but that argument only holds if the assumption that EA deliberately held off stuff as DLC is true. And that assumption is based off of no evidence whatsoever, but simply mistrust and cynicism. And WoW, your analogy is bad because you're arguing that EA isn't giving the whole package (the chicken). My point is that EA has already given you the entire chicken sandwich. A used and newly bought disc have the same exact content on it. It is only that EA is making the price of the extra DLC $0 for those who bought the game new, and $15 for those who bought it used.
So let me ask what I asked before. Would you simply be happy if EA made it so that everyone had to pay $15? I'm sure you guys would have all changed your tune, drop the assumption that it was witheld content, and see it as something extra.
All you guys are asking for is entitlement to get what others got for their loyalty and dedication. |
The DLC comes out on the same day as the game itself. They purposely held this back, there is no other explanation that makes sense. Also, for the record, I would be claiming that EA was being a jerk if they made everyone pay $15 for this because it is DAY 1 DLC (in other words-- it is content that should have been on the disk anyway but they didn't because they wanted to fleece the customers and get a few extra bucks).
I would change my tune if this DLC was released, say, a month or whatever after the original game shipped and they charged the same amount for everybody. While I don't personally like DLC, I don't see a major problem with it if it is not held back content.
As for the chicken sandwich example, I believe it would be more akin to buying the sandwich but they didn't give me the bottom bun. Sure, I still have a chicken sandwich and most of the 'features' (such as pickles or a top bun) but the sandwich is gimped. Customers are going to buy the game used, not realize that it doesn't come with these maps and get mad. Even though we can claim that the buyer should have done their research (which I would agree with-- customers should do their research before buying a product), the customer is still going to get mad at EA. This move will cost EA some customers. While they might buy this game used, they might also buy some other EA games new (such as Madden). However, customers would be mad that EA screwed them over and then refuse to buy there products all together.
Another analogy: what EA is doing is a like book publisher putting out a book without the epilogue. The publisher then will only give this missing chapter to those that buy the book new, but making people who buy the book used pay for it when it should have been included in the book in the first place. While this might increase profits in the short run, in the long run it will cause customers to stop buying your products and profits will diminsh in the future (which is bad business).







