• GreatMightyPoo
    +9

    Agreed. I've personally sworn off all Early Access games until Steam holds them more accountable for failures. DayZ hasn't failed officially yet, but I highly doubt I'll ever see a finished version; Towns development died and they released a half-assed "complete" version of the game; Nether development just died; Also The Stomping Land dev just up and vanished with everyone's money from KickStarter and Early Access.

    Yeah, never trusting Early Access again. Only Early Access games I'll ever own are the ones I bought before I made this decision. So far I have never given in, not even for Besieged. As good as that game looks, I'm not buying until it comes out of Early Access.

    • Qukatt
      +3

      I went for starbound despite the concerns you listed. Thankfully it has been delivering exceptionally well but I still worry that there's still a long way to go for them to implement the things they talk about.

      • Cheski
        +3

        Starbound is an exciting example of it paying off to support the dev. I anxiously await my son learning to read, so that our exploration can be begin.

        • Qukatt
          +3

          we play terraria with our 6 year old, it's awesome :) exploration and platform games are the best when you play with kids co-op :D new Gauntlet as well is awesome for both of my sons (the other is 4) to play something with daddy xD

          I;m looking forward to starbound adding in the villager quests and stuff. we took that chance on supporting them near the beginning when they had sectors and almost nothing but bumming about and I love it. we decided to go for it given how much playtime and value we'd gotten from terraria (like hundreds of hours for under a £1 per copy and we buy copies for everyone everytime there's a sale, lol).

          wish I could say the same for gnomoria which was promising and hoped it would be the graphic answer to dwarf fortress but hasn't seen an update in ages.

          I absolutely never support early access for AAA titles, companies with known tendency towards DLC or content locking or DRM practises beyond steam. And never if it's more than £10 because I assume I might at the very least enjoy it for a week on that price and that's ok, I spend more at the movies or the pub. thankfully steam has the refund for any reason thing now as long as you've played less than a few hours and it's shit which I think helps with returning unplayable crap. I can always repurchase at a later date if the situation changes. until then I don't need to waste my time or have rubbish cluttering up my games lists.

          • Cheski
            +2

            The lack of Gnomoria updates makes Cheski a sad panda. I too wished for it to be the graphical answer to DF.

          • Qukatt
            +2
            @Cheski -

            graphical nethack was best thing ever, ascii made my head spin.

            my gnomes were pretty stupid though they'd build themselves into corners and starve to death lol

          • Cheski
            +3
            @Qukatt -

            I had those sorts of issues in Spacebase DF-9. Which was another Early Access mess up.

          • Qukatt
            +3
            @Cheski -

            Its funny the first time but then its just annoying.

            Spacebase df9 sounds awfully close to copyright/trademark infringements lol! I tend not to even look at early access titles now unless I get like a review code

          • Cheski
            +1
            @Qukatt -

            I was fooled here because I didn't think DoubleFine would not properly finish a game. Real bummer.

          • Qukatt
            +2
            @Cheski -

            Yeah they are usually pretty good at delivering

        • Zephyrium
          +2

          I can't wait till my son is old enough to start playing Video Games.

          • Cheski
            +3

            It will happen. No fear. Then we can all play together!

    • racerxonclar
      +3

      DayZ is a real heart breaker. I've wanted to get into a game like that for a long time, but it's development is just so bad. Breaking Point has actually managed to surpass DayZ in content as a mod for Arma3. :/

      I'm not as bothered by Early Access games as most, but I tend to read whether a game is a safe by or not well. Generally, I end up feeling like I've bought a game, and there's just a lot of post-support for it. Darkest Dungeons and Ark: Survival Evolved are two that come to mind as amazingly playable games as is, that have dev teams pouring a lot of attention into them.

      • Cheski
        +1

        Breaking Point is great considering it is a free mod. It isn't without issue. I do like seeing forward progress and a lot of the features that BP has, such as Legions.

        Is ARK worth the price tag is the given state?

        • racerxonclar
          +2

          If you've got the hardware to handle it, I would say yes, and of course the game's better if you have a group to play with...being a survival game similar to Rust. There are updates from devs on a very regular basis, a lot of communication, the game is very functional, and it's a good bit of fun. For an example, they did a fairly large change to taming just recently, the community really didn't like the changes, and in less than an hour they'd already tweaked it.

          I'm trying to force my 560ti to handle it (when the game's low graphics preset says it's for a 770), so I'm stuck playing at 25fps most of the time. :P

          • Cheski
            +1

            Thanks! Finally upgraded to a GTX 980, so I'd better be able to handle it!

    • Psychotropic
      +2

      I never heard of The Stomping Land fiasco. Could you give me more information on it? it sounds really interesting.

      • GreatMightyPoo
        +2

        Guy starts a kickstarter for awesome dinosaur game. Gets funded, and releases barebones Early Access version which other people proceed to buy. Absolutely vanishes and development stops. Reaches a head when the artist leaves because he can't get in contact with the developer who still owes him money. Steam removes The Stomping Land from the store. Everyone is angry and wants refunds that Steam and Kickstarter won't give. So pretty much this guy ran off with everyone's money.

    • Cheski
      +1

      Exactly. I have many hours in DayZ and I feel like I have had enough fun to warrant the price of admission. I am still hopeful for it... But we'll see.

      7 Days to Die has been getting a ton of updates since I backed it on Kickstarter, same with PULSAR.

      Survive the nights is another I backed... While I am excited by the final announcement that the stress tests will finally be happening, is unfortunately 5 months past when it was originally supposed to happen.