It does not say 'not for everyone' when your buying it, maybe a refund for those who don't like it?
Caveat Emptor.
It does not say 'not for everyone' when your buying it, maybe a refund for those who don't like it?
I fully agree, and that's why I'm completely opposed to FDEV's considerations to bring ED to consoles. If you plan to bring a PC game to consoles you have to make some major concession w.r.t. game design since PS4 and XBox One are not even close to the performance of current high-end gaming PCs, let alone to gaming PCs in 2-3 years from now....
Minimum recommended hardware specification:
Direct X 11
Quad Core CPU ( 4 x 2Ghz is a reasonable minimum)
2 GB System RAM (more is always better)
DX 10 hardware GPU with 1GB video ram
Nvidia GTX 260
ATI 4870HD
Internet connection
Instead of whining about the small amount of features in standard beta and asking for a refund, you should just go away from this game and community and come back after it is in the release version. Look at your reputation. It's completely red.It does not say 'not for everyone' when your buying it, maybe a refund for those who don't like it?
"And Dangerous? Dangerous is pure Kubrick"
They get it.
It does not say 'not for everyone' when your buying it, maybe a refund for those who don't like it?
Instead of whining about the small amount of features in standard beta and asking for a refund, you should just go away from this game and community and come back after it is in the release version. Look at your reputation. It's completely red.
Cynical or not, going direct to an audience that absolutely understands the proposition has seemingly allowed Frontier to deliver its game uncompromised. The new additions, like online multiplayer and Oculus support, all make sense, and there's no attempt to build something that will be palatable to the widest possible audience - while truly satisfying none of them. Dangerous is definitely not for everyone - and that's a real strength. .
It does not say 'not for everyone' when your buying it, maybe a refund for those who don't like it?
its eeriness contrasted by the vivid visual & auditive experience feels as if it is fresh from a kubrick reel.
that is the highest possible compliment you can pay to a "motion picture".
I aplaud the fact that the authors had the nerve to point this out - despite the obvious backslash from disgruntled kids and trolls.
Well, not wishing to get into an argument, many of us indie developers design games with simple graphics to show that it is possible to develop a good game that relies on it's gameplay and not how many millions of pixels your engine can chuck out. It's not that we couldn't design a better looking game if we wanted to, we just choose not to.
It does not say 'not for everyone' when your buying it, maybe a refund for those who don't like it?
It does not say 'not for everyone' when your buying it, maybe a refund for those who don't like it?
You're serious?
Time to take a trip down to the food store...there's a whole load of food in my kitchen that isn't to my tastes - and it didn't say "not for everyone" on the label. Think I'm entitled to a refund?
You are wrong, he is entitled to a refund for that very reason. And because the FD store has not been updated with the new law he is entitled to a refund well into June 2015:
http://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=79dc3523-3780-4742-beae-a7c7dda97c55
"The Regulations
The Regulations make minor reforms to consumer contracts for digital content, which affect the consumer’s right to cancel and the pre-contractual information which must be provided by suppliers. These are as follows:
Cancellation: Consumers will have a right to cancel a purchase without providing reasons and without liability. There will be a right to cancellation within 14 days from the day after the contract was entered into. If the consumer was not made aware of this right at the time of contracting, but was made aware within the following 12 months, the 14 day period will run from the date of notification. If no notification is provided the customer shall have 12 months from the date that the cancellation right would normally expire (i.e. 14 days plus an additional 12 months) in which to cancel. "
EDIT: My wife has just told me (corporate contract lawyer specialising in digital law), if FD never make him aware of his rights, his ability to get a refund runs infinitely.
Importantly, the supply of digital content must not commence until the end of the cancellation period without the express consent of the customer, in which case the right to cancel (described above) will cease.
From the same article:
So, all Frontier need to do is to have a notification in the download page informing users (from the 13th of June) that their right to refund is waived in the event that they download the product within the 14 day period.
You are wrong, he is entitled to a refund for that very reason. And because the FD store has not been updated with the new law he is entitled to a refund well into June 2015: