The games and people behind them are what matter most in my opinion. I don't really care about the name of the studio for the most part; for example, I really enjoyed Westwood Studios games in the past, but because many of their key people went to form Petroglyph and also make good RTS games, I am more happy about that than I am sad about Westwood Studios going under.
I don't want studios to go under, but at the same time I understand it's the nature of the industry. I look at EA and all the studios they gobbled up--Maxis, Westwood Studios, Bullfog--and while I do lament the closure of those studios, a lot of people that worked on those great games are still working, and arguably working on some great projects.
@ProtossRushX said:
agree with gamer lover its about the games not the companies imo
bad games = bad service to us imo
But what determines a "bad game"? Sales? Or objective markers of quality?
I Feel a lot of people dismiss studios out of hand for ignorant or superficial reasons.
@the-a-baum said:
So glad to see most don't want any to go under. So many people employed and lives effected. End of the day we vote with our wallets, don't we?
There is this weird mentality that if X was not around Y would hire everyone and give me more games. Does not work that way sorry and those people would never get a chance to work and grow and go wherever their creativeness takes them. There would be even less jobs and less really talented people in the industry.
Yeah pleasantly surprised by people in this thread; the general feeling I usually get from SW is that if you're "not with us, you're against us" as far as platform and games go, but it's nice to see we can take a step back from our petty arguments (which are fun, I'm not trying to be all holier than thou) and think about the bigger picture.
Games are games, and the people that make them are often hard working, under-payed, and very talented. They work in an unforgiving industry. I hear working for EA, Ubisoft, and Activision is arguably one of the worst things you can do in the tech industry, while many programmers often work on a contract basis.
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