Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Some shows DO have an ending (Score 2, Interesting) 178

Buffy ended well, with Sunnydale disappearing into a hole in the ground, and Buffy being released from the curse of the Slayer. I believe that everyone knew that Season 7 was the last before it began. Angel, less satisfying because it was a cliffhanger ending; "I'm gonna kill me a dragon." And I think that was canceled late in the season.

Deep Space Swine had a very B5esque ending, but it was a developed ending, not something that was sprung two episodes from the end of the season.

Comment Re:Call him Monkey Boy all you want (Score 1) 616

The PS2 did have the valuable advantage of a large stable of PS1 games that it could play. The XBox was starting out of the gate and had a long way to catch up. The PS2 also had a large existing fanbase that would automatically upgrade from their PS1. It's more likely those advantages superseded any inherent difficulty in programming its games.

And don't forget, gamers don't care how hard it is to develop games, they just want to play them.

Comment Re:A game? (Score 1) 208

Libertarianism is the new Communism. It's an ideology that sounds nice on paper, but doesn't really work in real life.

Except that you are mixing your apples and oranges here. Libertarianism is a political ideology that goes along with conservatism and liberalism (and others.) While Communism is an economic philosophy that opposes capitalism.

To say that Communism doesn't work in real life isn't entirely accurate either. All we've seen so far is a form of Totalitarian Communism where all the power of the state is vested in a small group at the top. It's entirely possible to have a Democratic Communism where the the power of the state is vested in the people who make the decisions and the state still retains the means of production. We can't say that this form of Communism doesn't work because it hasn't really been tested.

We can surmise that it probably won't work because of the nature of people. But that's not proof of failure.

Comment Re:Bill Gates? (Score 1) 580

You're probably not too far off the mark with this one.

A lot of companies tend to struggle after the founders/visionaries depart. It's not that the people left in charge are incompetent. It's because the founders had a clear direction and were successful enough to stare down the more troublesome shareholders. Once they're gone the new management tends to lose that direction.

I suspect that Microsoft will go through the same struggles once Gates is completely out of the picture. I wouldn't be surprised to see the company make some quite bad business decisions based on shareholder pressure.

The same thing will probably happen to Google, Facebook, and others.

Comment Re:This isn't a trend, it's SOE desperation (Score 1) 68

As for micro-transactions, they won't fly in the U.S. for a long time, especially in today's economy. People won't justify paying $xx for an item they can get with some time they already paid for. Even the geeks with cash they normally burn through are cutting back on extras.

A large number of players in the US market already take part in micro-transactions across all the games out there. The difference is that they are not generally sanctioned by the game companies.

Gold selling and powerleveling services are big business, and the players themselves have proved that they are willing to pay real cash for in-game items. If players are willing to pay third-party gold sharks and take risks with their accounts, it'd be a good bet that they'd pay for officially sanctioned items too.

I wouldn't count out micro-transactions in the US market yet.

Slashdot Top Deals

HELP!!!! I'm being held prisoner in /usr/games/lib!

Working...