1: According to Frontier's own information released, Elite has sold over 1.4 million copies last I checked.Sorry but this seems contradictory. Don't casual players buy the expansions and the cosmetics.
And here's some perspective...Steam charts shows No Man's Sky peak players at 212k, ED at 18k. Ah but sarge, you say, not everyone plays on Steam. So, okay, let's be very generous and say only 20% play on Steam, so 90k peak for ED. Let's round it up to 100k for good measure. That still leaves 112k people who could, potentially, be in the market for a game like ED. So, why are they not buying it?
And where did the circa 10k players go that were playing last October but not this one? (18k peak was Oct 2015, most recent highest players was just shy of 8k a couple of weeks ago)
I didn't pay £70 (ED and Horizons) to play forever in the one ship I got with some effort in the first week.
1a: Steamspy is, by no means accurate, for one example, anyone with a private account isn't counted, and you are also forgetting about average play time, which is better 200 players playing 20 minutes each? or 20 players playing 200 minutes each?
1b: you do not know if these people do not already own Elite.
2: You are not going to be stuck, there are plenty of great small ships you can fly and do everything that the game has to offer to you, cobra mk3 remains one of my most favourite ships to fly and do stuff, but I do not expect it to be able to handle 'big' things, so I scale my expectations down, and thoroughly enjoy myself, and that is the problem in my book with many people now a days, unless you have the 'biggest'/'shiniest' or such of things, stuff isn't "fun" which in my book couldn't be farther from the truth, and just sets up people to be disappointed, but you know what? at least in my book, that isn't the game that is to blame for that, but the current gaming culture, and the enormous amount of casual games, that focus on quickly giving people something big and shiny. And no, it isn't the players fault directly either, at most they are just letting themselves be swept away by the casual gaming culture/market/companies, but people should at least try to stop changing stuff because it is different from what they are used to in my book. Instead try to adapt yourself to this new thing, and see what happens, I find that to be the most enjoyable part of gaming, adapting to something new rather then just getting more of the same.
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