• @Etterra@lemmy.world
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    551 month ago

    This could be cool; here’s a tip guys if you want people to really like it? Don’t charge for a million different DLC packs. I’m not sure who’s worse, EA or Paradox, but JFC just trim it down at the very least.

    • @jballs@sh.itjust.works
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      141 month ago

      You know, I actually appreciate Paradox. They make top notch games like Stellaris, that are absolutely playable and complete by themselves, then add optional DLC while continuing to support the original game with updates. Some of their DLC is purely cosmetic, but they also add a lot of cool shit like “what if we had giant star sized dragons?”

      For a game that’s 8 years old, I don’t mind dropping a few bucks on interesting DLC every now and then. All in all, I’d say I’ve spent about $50 on Stellaris DLC and have more than enough content to keep me busy for a while.

      The Sims, on the other hand, is just fucking out of control. They’ve got expansion packs, game packs, stuff packs, and kits. Buying everything for The Sims 4 would be close to $1,100 as of a year ago - probably quite a bit more by now.

      • Cethin
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        1 month ago

        The issue with PDX is the total cost can get too high and, I assume, pushes away new purchases. If you play one of their games and buy the DLC as it comes, it’s fairly cheap. The base games are a fair $40, which is nice. However, to catch up on HoI4, which I think i purchased the deluxe edition for, would cost me about $115, while most of it is 50% off right now. Admittedly a lot of this is cosmetic stuff that could be skipped, but the price has to scare away new players. EUIV is $248 for me, with most between 30-70% off. Even CK2, which I own every expansion for, is $157 for cosmetics, content packs, music, etc all 50% off. It gets ridiculous.

        Personally, I tend to buy these games at launch and, if I want to play them a few years later, I pirate it. I have given Paradox a lot of money and I like supporting their games, but I play far too many of them (basically all of them) for me to think it’s reasonable to buy all these DLCs. I’ll buy the first couple, but after that I’m probably never putting the time into it like I did at launch and it isn’t worth it. Piracy becomes the most convenient option at that point, as long as you don’t care about achievements.

        I don’t really mind this model because it seems to work for them, and it let’s them continue to work on a game for a decade or more, instead of being forced to start from scratch and remake everything over and over. I know I’m not the only one doing what I do though, and I’m sure they know this as well. You don’t need the expansions and everything, and they even include parts of it for free usually, but some mods will require them or it would just enhance the experience I already payed $100+ for, so I like to use them, but just can’t justify the price for the 5 PDX games in active development plus the other studios games with the same model, like Cities: Skylines.

      • @shutz@lemmy.ca
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        41 month ago

        People complain about the total cost too get everything in The Sims, but I don’t remember anyone complaining about the total cost of every song in Rock Band.

        • @jballs@sh.itjust.works
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          1 month ago

          Lol I absolutely complained about the cost of songs in Rock Band and Guitar Hero. I started playing those games in Guitar Hero 2 and refused to ever pay extra for additional songs. I guess in my mind, that was vastly different than paying for stuff like Stellaris DLC since I felt like I was being nickled and dimed.

          I take that back though. Now that I think about it I might have paid for the Trogdor song… unless that was included in the base game.

        • @Etterra@lemmy.world
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          11 month ago

          My friends sure did. Personally I never gave a damn about rock band or any other music rhythm games. You’re not long though.

          I also like to point out that train SIM DLCs, which I also don’t play or care about, are also exorbitant and insanely numerous. But that’s a really niche product and I’ve heard the argument made that they’re trying to recoup off of the investment for something that gets low numbers of sales. I don’t know how much work goes into developing one fucking train car or one train or whatever; it would seem to me that most of it should just be assets considering that the physics engine and basic architecture of all components is done and basically similar. Regardless of it’s statistics a train engine is a train engine and all cars look basically the same; standardized wheel frame with one of a fairly small number of actual car designs. I think it’s like a dozen or two? Everything after that is scaling and skin, and changing numbers for a scale isn’t that hard. I don’t even know if these things have hit boxes, since it’s just meant to be a train sim and not something you run around on like a platformer. So whatever the cost of developing the skin assets is most of what those DLCs are, so charging like 15 bucks for each them is pretty ridiculous. Honestly I don’t even know why I looked into this in the first place years ago but the pricing structure really is silly.

    • @Ummdustry@sh.itjust.works
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      41 month ago

      So far the XCOM series has been pretty good at that. Each game typically has 1 big pack which feels worth the money and 1 or 2 chea[ stinkers there’s no need/push to buy

  • @Shadowedcross@lemmy.world
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    191 month ago

    The more competition Sims has, the better. Maybe EA will actually try and innovate… HAHA. I’ve been keeping an eye on Paralives and Life By You, and there are a couple others coming as well, I think. It’ll be a good time to be a life sim fan in the next couple years.

  • Ech
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    181 month ago

    The Sims but you churn through characters like popcorn.

    • @CluckN@lemmy.world
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      241 month ago

      Sims franchise has a dedicated fanbase but they keep getting screwed by these insanely priced DLCs. I think people are hoping for a City Skylines scenario where another studio tackles the genre and adds mod/quality of life support.

      • @RGB3x3@lemmy.world
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        81 month ago

        Well let’s hope it’s not a Cities Skylines scenario because the second game is a complete shit show.

        And even the first one has many issues.

        • @novibe@lemmy.ml
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          1 month ago

          Cmon man… Sure it had issues, but acting like Cities Skylines didn’t completely revolutionise city builders is insane.

      • @ugo@feddit.it
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        1 month ago

        I thought Life by You was trying to fill that gap.

        With both that and Sims 5 (edit: oh an Paralives of course, was forgetting about that) on the horizon will this new studio be able to find its space in the market?

        Guess more competition is always good, hopefully it doesn’t flop immediately.

      • @BleatingZombie@lemmy.world
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        11 month ago

        It also feels like the Sim logic hasn’t really changed in a while. They still do things like go upstairs to the bathroom to wash dishes

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    71 month ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Before founding Midsummer, the two worked on XCOM, Civilization: Beyond Earth, and Marvel’s Midnight Suns.

    Today, the new studio has announced its first game: a next-gen life sim game with former The Sims director Grant Rodiek leading the project as executive producer.

    According to the studio’s press release, this debut project “emphasizes player-driven narratives, allowing communities to share memorable moments that grow out of the creativity of players themselves.” The project doesn’t currently have a title or release date.

    This new game will face stiff competition in the life-sim genre, which has been dominated by big-budget games like The Sims 4 and smaller, indie outfits like Stardew Valley.

    Midsummer’s developers wrote that they want to give players the tools to tell their own stories, reminiscent of the popular trend of players using avatars created in The Sims and similar games to act out soap opera-style stories that are recorded and uploaded to social media.

    Meanwhile, EA is already working on its next iteration of The Sims, a free-to-play title dubbed “Project Rene,” and former Sims and Second Life developer Rod Humble set up a new studio to launch the life-sim Life by You, which is due out on June 4th.


    The original article contains 218 words, the summary contains 200 words. Saved 8%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • terwn43lp
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    41 month ago

    my only concern is that Midnight Suns was riddled with bugs and very high hardware demand, but the xcom 1+2 engine would work great with a Sims game, hell I’ll take a Sims Tactics at this point

    • @RebekahWSD@lemmy.world
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      11 month ago

      Did it have that many bugs? The only bug I got was the whole no ancestral armor at the uhhh greenhouse area.

      Which, to be fair, was really really annoying! Damn I want the last armor!

  • @griD@feddit.de
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    31 month ago

    The Sim X: Terror from the derp. Yeah no Jake, we want a successor to X-COM Apocalypse if you don’t mind.

  • @nanoUFO@sh.itjust.worksM
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    1 month ago

    Weird change of direction but I’m okay with it, plenty of indie devs are picking up the slack for turned based games.

  • @TrousersMcPants@lemmy.world
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    21 month ago

    I don’t really see how this would compete with Stardew Valley, honestly, sounds more like the initial Sims comparison is more apt. Stardew and Sims are pretty different games

  • Tarquinn2049
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    11 month ago

    Look forward to it, worst comes to worst, two new options for the sims, with this and paralives is two chances to not fail like sims 3 and 4 did. And I don’t mean fail in a financial sense, I’m sure they made money. But failed in a “worth playing” sense.

    • @ugo@feddit.it
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      1 month ago

      I remember playing lots of sims 2 as a kid. Could not play sims 3 due to not having a pc that could run it, and I found sims 4 extremely disappointing.

      Been keeping an eye on Life by You and Paralives for modern takes at the genre.

      I wonder if EA will try to innovate with sims 5 and if they’ll try to optimize the unbelievable loading times (talking about sims 4 here) due to the competition or if they hope to coast on reputation alone.