For the sight-impaired ;)
Like that other bit about the EULA? Made me laugh inside...
The bit about the EULA makes me want to cry inside, I know that much. With the attitude of stores in the UK about returning opened PC games (because of the fact that, obviously, every person trying to return a game in the UK is a dirty pirate who has copied the disc) they need to start printing the EULA up so you can read it in-store. Because to read the EULA means opening the box and inserting the disc into your computer, and by opening the box, most shops here will not allow you to return the game.
Makes me want to take my laptop with me one day, buy a game, open it in store, read the EULA and then say, "I don't agree with this EULA - and according to it, I can get a full refund right now. So yes please - refund, hurry it up!"
Red Alert 3 is another game that I won't be buying because of this nonsense.
I swear, it ain't gonna be too much longer before I stop buying new games on the PC. :|
Same here. EA is making it easy for me to keep more of my money.
I really
want to buy Crysis: Warhead. I
want to buy Red Alert 3.
But I
refuse, point blank, to support this sort of crap.
Now I just hope that Fallout 3 won't have this bollocks on it as well. Or I'll be cancelling my pre-order for the Collectors Edition of that, too.
-UPDATE-
EA continues to get spanked by pirates and customers.
That was a fairly interesting read, actually. Thanks. :) Although EA's response is funny, "We've not changed our DRM scheme." Uh, no, no you haven't. You are using a newer form of SecuROM, which people are so far reacting badly toward. What amazes me is that it's no more successful than the older DRM schemes, but at least 'disc in the drive' games weren't a 'rental' scenario like the 'limited activations then you have to beg us for more' one.
The last paragraph is fairly amusing, though... in a 'despair for their stupidity' kind of way... "DRM can encourage the best customers to behave slightly better"... uh... honestly, I'd have said that the 'best' customers were already following to the letter, so all you've done is give them another hoop to jump through. It won't make the already good customers behave better. But it will make the perennial wavers lean more toward the 'bad' choice.
edit:
http://www.extremetech.com/article2/0,2845,2330377,00.asp
Editorial. Boils down to "Thanks EA. Thanks for
nothing."
Brings up an excellent point about using games for benchmarks, too - reviewers aren't going to go out and buy hundreds of licenses for a game just so they can use it as a benchmark... so Spore, Crysis Warhead, RA3, Mass Effect... the 'free-neutral' advertising given when using a game as a benchmark is non-existent.