38 Studios has attempted to justify the content being gated behind an online pass in Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning. When asked why an entire quest line was being held to ransom🤡 in exchange for new sales, the developer said it was originally planned as paid DLC.
“The House of Valor content is, for all intents and purposes, our first DLC content,” . “Instead of holding onto it for a month or more and charging everyone for it later, we opted to give it to those who purchase the game new for free.”
This is a pretty smart move on the part of 38 Studios. Using the already questionable tactic of holding back content for paid DLC in order to make the more questionable tactic of online passes look almost heroic is a master stroke of PR genius. I have to app🀅laud 💯that.
It’s a complex situation though, I grant you that. Giving away DLC is more akin to rewarding new customers rather than punishing used ones, something . Still, one can then argue if it’s really a “gift” when it could have been in the game originally and was taken out to sell at a price. It certainly bears a lot more thought than it looked like it deserved, given the clumsy presentation of the pass found within the game’s box.
In any case, I maintain that having this pass as the first thing a customer sees really sends the wrong message about how confident a publisher is that it won’t be traded into GameStop within a week. Maybe next time, don’t have a game box that’s nothing but the disc, the EULA, and a “Please don’t trade me in” flyer.
Published: Jan 27, 2012 05:45 pm