It is not only about requiring the sony account in countries where it is not available. It is also about forcing players to log into yet another useless account, when the game is bought from steam. This practice is widely hated by gamers everywhere. If I buy a game on Steam, why would I be required to log in to some other account or launcher to actually start the game.
The publishers wish to somehow capture the players with their own launchers, but this is never going to do them any good and is widely hated.
The days of loading up physical media, installing, and playing the game are gone.
Publishers have been hard for micro transactions. That’s the whole reason for it. Maybe they are also siphoning your usage data, but that’s mainly a side hustle at this point.
Why cut a piece off for Steam when they can bypass them entirely and force users to buy directly?
>The publishers wish to somehow capture the players with their own launchers, but this is never going to do them any good and is widely hated.
Nah, if it was possible to sign up for PSN accounts, people would have hated it but done it. Look at how Bethesda, Ubisoft, EA, and other enshittified game companies still sell gajillions of copies.
It's inaccurate to lump in the actual reason for change (game being unavailable in regions) vs. a reason no game company has ever been motivated to change ("we don't like making thirdparty accounts").
Even in more recent times, the entire PS5 life thus far has been riddled with consumer-hostile behavior (promising free upgrades and then walking back from it, forcing people to use the new controllers even if the PS4 ones are perfectly capable to play the new games, increasing prices of games and consoles, bullying companies so they don't support cross-platform play etc)
Very rare for a multibillion dollar company to bend the knee.
All it took was a 3-4 day campaign of PR hell, and refunds from around the globe to get them to move an inch.
I bet Sony has a backlog issue to make account creation globally available. Then at that point, there will be nothing to stop them from forcing it down everyones throat.
What I have heard is that in some countries (UK?), Sony requires identity verification to register an account ( similar to “id.me” or login.gov) for a gaming service.
I wish the best luck in new challenges for the Sony intern who was responsible for the decision to consider PSN as mandatory in the first place. No one could see this happening.
I very much believe this strategy came straight from the top.
I assume that it is widely believed that account activation enables all kinds desirable outcomes - additional data collection, product stickiness, a marketing target, a pre-activated credit card, etc - even if it is customer hostile and customers absolutely hate it.
We've long been in the phase of consolidated corporate capitalism where a company as large as Sony believes they can just force you to do what they want, if they believe it's good for them.
Unfortunately, without competition, they are probably right to believe this, at least in the short to medium term. I think that people just don't tend to vote with their dollar, like they should, when there are no alternatives. But I do think that companies that are customer-hostile eventually pay the price, even if two, or three, or ten executive teams get to cash out first.
Is it just me? Or should Don't and PSN just stick with PlayStation based games? If you want to use a PlayStation then fine, get a PSN account I can understand that. But if I play the game on Steam on my PC which has no ties to Sony, why do I need a PSN account at all?
I don't think so. It seems more like a story of corporate blundering. They shipped an incredibly popular game that was a breakout hit. 6 months later, changed the requirements (for no reason other than shortsighted greed) such that people in something like 70 countries could no longer play the game. Backlash ensued, and the reputation of the game is in the mud compared to where it was before.
Not really, a big chunk of players had good reason to be angry. PSN accounts aren't available in half of the world, and the Steam listing was initially set up to allow anyone to buy the game, so many people would have been locked out of what they paid for. Steam opened up extended refunds due to extenuating circumstances but only after the controversy blew up.
No. They sold the game worldwide, and the FAQ explicitly said linking an account was worldwide, then they switched on the requirement and changed the FAQ.
Except it's impossible to create a PSN account in a lot of countires, countries where it was possible to buy and play the game and now it's too late for a refund, so people are stuck with a game they now can't play anymore.
Then they proceeded to gaslight people ("it just takes 2 minutes").
Then they withdrew the game from 177 countries (out of ~195 depending how you count), so people not only they couldn't buy it anymore, but people who had already bought it lost access to it.
It's a shitshow, they completely destroyed players' trust with this.
This is great news, and I hope Sony gets some well-deserved praise for this. I'm generally not pro-corporate, or pro-tech company in any context. However, when a company compromises to please its customers, that behavior should be rewarded; the worst thing that could happen ideologues could continue trying to turn the screws.
I don't think they deserve praise, they just acted in defense of their bottom line. The game was losing players and it was being review bombed because of this change, while losing players' trust.
I'm sure they would have maintained the requirement if they could, despite the backlash. But money got in the way.
These companies don't deserve any kind of pat on the back for just doing the bare minimum. Doing the right thing or making minor concessions to customers is not something that deserves special recognition - it is the basic responsibility of corporations.
Too often, these corporations act all high and mighty when they make some tiny concession to customers or avoid a PR disaster. That's not them being generous or ethical, that's just them covering their own butts. They have all the money and power in the world, so the least they can do is meet basic standards.We should not reward this as if it is some noble, praiseworthy behavior.
Corporations have immense power and resources. When they finally decide to do the right thing after public pressure, that is not deserving of accolades. They are looking out for themselves first and foremost. So let's not act like they're heroes for it - they're just avoiding getting called out, that's all. True ethics and responsibility from corporations should be the norm, not some rare, praise-worthy occurrence.
> This is great news, and I hope Sony gets some well-deserved praise for this.
What? If someone holds you up at gunpoint but decides to let you go after you scream for the police, they dont get praise they get jail time.
Sony did nothing right in a situation where the right thing would have been to do nothing at all to begin with. They decided to try to strangle a huge success for the sake of cash. The fact that They reverted after the game ene from “overwhelmingly positive” to “overwhelmingly negative” and they got bombed with refund requests isn’t something to praise, it’s a given. They realized that they fucked up royally and that their plan to spin the community to PSN would not work so they stopped.
The people deserving praise are the players and the community that united against Sony, and the developers and leads who listened to the community and honestly and openly said “if you don’t like it speak up, we can’t change the decision but Sony will have to listen to the response”
Praise? They were caught with their pants down. They fixed the issue after realizing how it’s impacting their bottom line (massive refunds across the PC users).
I have no doubt if refunds were not an issue, then Sony would have given gamers the equivalent of a middle finger.
[+] [-] skeletal88|1 year ago|reply
The publishers wish to somehow capture the players with their own launchers, but this is never going to do them any good and is widely hated.
[+] [-] zorked|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] xyst|1 year ago|reply
Publishers have been hard for micro transactions. That’s the whole reason for it. Maybe they are also siphoning your usage data, but that’s mainly a side hustle at this point.
Why cut a piece off for Steam when they can bypass them entirely and force users to buy directly?
[+] [-] sevagh|1 year ago|reply
Nah, if it was possible to sign up for PSN accounts, people would have hated it but done it. Look at how Bethesda, Ubisoft, EA, and other enshittified game companies still sell gajillions of copies.
It's inaccurate to lump in the actual reason for change (game being unavailable in regions) vs. a reason no game company has ever been motivated to change ("we don't like making thirdparty accounts").
[+] [-] brnt|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] vaylian|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] Kipters|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] waffleiron|1 year ago|reply
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NProtect_GameGuard
[+] [-] unknown|1 year ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] xyst|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] xyst|1 year ago|reply
All it took was a 3-4 day campaign of PR hell, and refunds from around the globe to get them to move an inch.
I bet Sony has a backlog issue to make account creation globally available. Then at that point, there will be nothing to stop them from forcing it down everyones throat.
What I have heard is that in some countries (UK?), Sony requires identity verification to register an account ( similar to “id.me” or login.gov) for a gaming service.
Shit is wild
[+] [-] miohtama|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] spicyusername|1 year ago|reply
I assume that it is widely believed that account activation enables all kinds desirable outcomes - additional data collection, product stickiness, a marketing target, a pre-activated credit card, etc - even if it is customer hostile and customers absolutely hate it.
We've long been in the phase of consolidated corporate capitalism where a company as large as Sony believes they can just force you to do what they want, if they believe it's good for them.
Unfortunately, without competition, they are probably right to believe this, at least in the short to medium term. I think that people just don't tend to vote with their dollar, like they should, when there are no alternatives. But I do think that companies that are customer-hostile eventually pay the price, even if two, or three, or ten executive teams get to cash out first.
[+] [-] Intermernet|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] ChrisArchitect|1 year ago|reply
More discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40271104
[+] [-] theden|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] polishdude20|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|1 year ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] zzbzq|1 year ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] aqme28|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] __alexs|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] aeurielesn|1 year ago|reply
But digital libraries do really suck.
[+] [-] whstl|1 year ago|reply
This is textbook corporate asshole behavior.
[+] [-] jsheard|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] Kipters|1 year ago|reply
Except it's impossible to create a PSN account in a lot of countires, countries where it was possible to buy and play the game and now it's too late for a refund, so people are stuck with a game they now can't play anymore.
Then they proceeded to gaslight people ("it just takes 2 minutes").
Then they withdrew the game from 177 countries (out of ~195 depending how you count), so people not only they couldn't buy it anymore, but people who had already bought it lost access to it.
It's a shitshow, they completely destroyed players' trust with this.
[+] [-] pcal|1 year ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] pcal|1 year ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] everdrive|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] Kipters|1 year ago|reply
I'm sure they would have maintained the requirement if they could, despite the backlash. But money got in the way.
[+] [-] aqme28|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] gaius_baltar|1 year ago|reply
Too often, these corporations act all high and mighty when they make some tiny concession to customers or avoid a PR disaster. That's not them being generous or ethical, that's just them covering their own butts. They have all the money and power in the world, so the least they can do is meet basic standards.We should not reward this as if it is some noble, praiseworthy behavior.
Corporations have immense power and resources. When they finally decide to do the right thing after public pressure, that is not deserving of accolades. They are looking out for themselves first and foremost. So let's not act like they're heroes for it - they're just avoiding getting called out, that's all. True ethics and responsibility from corporations should be the norm, not some rare, praise-worthy occurrence.
[+] [-] bitcharmer|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] gklitz|1 year ago|reply
What? If someone holds you up at gunpoint but decides to let you go after you scream for the police, they dont get praise they get jail time.
Sony did nothing right in a situation where the right thing would have been to do nothing at all to begin with. They decided to try to strangle a huge success for the sake of cash. The fact that They reverted after the game ene from “overwhelmingly positive” to “overwhelmingly negative” and they got bombed with refund requests isn’t something to praise, it’s a given. They realized that they fucked up royally and that their plan to spin the community to PSN would not work so they stopped.
The people deserving praise are the players and the community that united against Sony, and the developers and leads who listened to the community and honestly and openly said “if you don’t like it speak up, we can’t change the decision but Sony will have to listen to the response”
[+] [-] xyst|1 year ago|reply
I have no doubt if refunds were not an issue, then Sony would have given gamers the equivalent of a middle finger.
Forget your privacy concerns.
[+] [-] HelloNurse|1 year ago|reply
[+] [-] goda90|1 year ago|reply