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Biggest MMO Failure to date?

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  • smh_alotsmh_alot Member Posts: 976
    Originally posted by itgrowls

     Rift actually took more players from WoW then any other title so far, around 2mil. And now WoW has some of Rift's features trying to get those players back in MoP. AOE looting anyone? LOL Oh i know you're not making this stuff up, people will argue with you about it but i have the launch and prelaunch videos and the articles with that stuff in them.

     

    ? Wtf... lol, Rift didn't even have that many players, 2mil, let alone that they all got stolen from WoW. This sounds like utter made up nonsense.
  • TibernicusTibernicus Member Posts: 433
    Originally posted by cylon8
    i dont get you people shouldn't we be celebrating and supporting the games that HAVE survived...regardless of whether or not the provide any future proofing for the genre they still are financial and fan successes. And frankly sto isn't a failure...perfect no a failure NO

    It was a pretty massive failure. It only ever started to get some cash flow when it became free. Mainly for the same reason SWTOR was a failure.

    We celebrate these failures because it finally taught the stupid publishers that we will not pay monthly fees for over instanced linear games that pretend to be MMOs, but miss the point of them entirely.

  • TibernicusTibernicus Member Posts: 433
    Originally posted by smh_alot
    Originally posted by itgrowls

     Rift actually took more players from WoW then any other title so far, around 2mil. And now WoW has some of Rift's features trying to get those players back in MoP. AOE looting anyone? LOL Oh i know you're not making this stuff up, people will argue with you about it but i have the launch and prelaunch videos and the articles with that stuff in them.

     

    ? Wtf... lol, Rift didn't even have that many players, 2mil, let alone that they all got stolen from WoW. This sounds like utter made up nonsense.

    It IS absolute nonsense. Rift already had to merge servers because they lost so many players. That's never, EVER been a good sign.

  • tiefighter25tiefighter25 Member Posts: 937
    Apparently we are discussing SWTOR's new forum PVP class: necromancer.
  • superniceguysuperniceguy Member UncommonPosts: 2,278

    SWTOR failed the moment it needed 500K subs to break even. Not even WOW had 500K subs at launch. I remember being there at launch, and it only had a few servers. It just grew and grew, over the years.

    Now everyone piles into a MMO at launch, and then enjoys it for a few months, and then quits, instead of everyone trying it over time and building population.

    I think SOE with ProSieben has made it the "Biggest MMO Failure to date". Not one person in the ProSieben thread on the EQ2 forums wants to migrate, and is prepared not to play a SOE (or rather ProSieben) game ever again, but at least with SWTOR some people actually like SWTOR and want to play it.

  • PelaajaPelaaja Member Posts: 697
    Originally posted by Tibernicus
    Originally posted by smh_alot
    Originally posted by itgrowls

     Rift actually took more players from WoW then any other title so far, around 2mil. And now WoW has some of Rift's features trying to get those players back in MoP. AOE looting anyone? LOL Oh i know you're not making this stuff up, people will argue with you about it but i have the launch and prelaunch videos and the articles with that stuff in them.

     

    ? Wtf... lol, Rift didn't even have that many players, 2mil, let alone that they all got stolen from WoW. This sounds like utter made up nonsense.

    It IS absolute nonsense. Rift already had to merge servers because they lost so many players. That's never, EVER been a good sign.

    Ye, they did.

    Nevertheless, Rift was and is a massive success considering where they took off. And after well done merges (free transfers once per week), working and well done dungeon finder tool the game is fabulous to play. At any given time the most waiting time to do expert dungeon is 5 min max (unless you've queud only DPS, then it's infinite). And because the callings (classes) are so all around, you can play any role on any calling and have fun.

    I predict Rift will be around for few years more, good sign or not. Just because the game is really working, good looking enough and most important HAS BROKE EVEN.

    SW:ToR on the other hand will be forgotten soonish. The only thing keeping it alive are those guys in robes that think it's better to have anything star wars than nothing star wars.

    image

  • ElikalElikal Member UncommonPosts: 7,912

    Oh god YES! How can anyone doubt SWTOR is THE biggest FAIL in the history of MMOs, or even the history of gaming! They had everything! Bioware, a beloved and experienced studio! Star Wars, THE biggest IP ever! The endless coffers of EA and LucasArts to pay! Years and years of development time! AND a previous Star Wars MMO as referrence for experience! It was THE singlemost expensive MMO and expensive game!

    We beta testers told them ALL they needed to know. So the critique was on the table!

    Given all this, yes, SWTOR is the biggest FAIL in MMO and gaming history ever. They would need another 100 Million investment, 1-2 years COMPLETE overhaul and relaunch like FF14, only EA being evil will never do that.

    People don't ask questions to get answers - they ask questions to show how smart they are. - Dogbert

  • DarkcrystalDarkcrystal Member UncommonPosts: 963
    Originally posted by pharazonic

    This has got to be the biggest MMO failure to date. Big and I mean BIG budget studios (BioWare, and then all of Mythic), many millions of dollars, reknown voice actors and actors, world-famous interllectual property (Star Wars - who doesn't know it???), one of the titans of video games, EA and many years of anticipated development - all of this to crash and burn in less than a year? 

     

    Sure you guys can argue that F2P is not a failure and that the game had "always been intended for F2P/Freemium" . Personally I think this view is bogus but whatever.

     

    But the FACT remains that this game was THE WoW killer. Everyone from EA's CEO to BioWare's developers to SWTOR community managers said that this was the game that was going to face Blizzard's juggernaught, WoW. (You can look up articles posted during SWTOR's development that how this was the next big thing; I am not making this stuff up.) 

     

    Well, one game still requires you to buy the latest expansion at FULL PRICE. One game still requires you to buy the game to level to levelcap. One game still has a major expansion coming up. One game still requires a subscription fee. That game isn't SWTOR. 

     

    This has got to be the most monumental MMO failure - way beyond other "WoW killers" like AoC, War, etc. I mean, even WAR still has a subscription. How sad. 

    HAHAHAH, you call make million of dollars a failure????  Some people have no clue... Ya the game did not meet expectations, nether did GW2, or any other game... But a failure fair from it,  to funny, and I do not play SWTOR as of right now, so call people fanboys all day.

     

    Get a clue before you say a game fails, but if a game makes millions EA is laughing it up.... When it goes free they will make more just like DDO and LOTR did.. People/gamers today make me laugh, there is no such thing as a WOW killer, WOW came out when new gamers started the genre and Blizzard was a huge name....

    Get a clue

  • mikahrmikahr Member Posts: 1,066
    Originally posted by Darkcrystal

    HAHAHAH, you call make million of dollars a failure????  Some people have no clue...

    Yah, when you need tens of millons just to stay afloat and youre making only millions its called a failure.

    So yah, ill give you a hint:

    get a clue

  • Bior337Bior337 Member Posts: 25
    Originally posted by Pelaaja
    Originally posted by Tibernicus
    Originally posted by smh_alot
    Originally posted by itgrowls

     Rift actually took more players from WoW then any other title so far, around 2mil. And now WoW has some of Rift's features trying to get those players back in MoP. AOE looting anyone? LOL Oh i know you're not making this stuff up, people will argue with you about it but i have the launch and prelaunch videos and the articles with that stuff in them.

     

    ? Wtf... lol, Rift didn't even have that many players, 2mil, let alone that they all got stolen from WoW. This sounds like utter made up nonsense.

    It IS absolute nonsense. Rift already had to merge servers because they lost so many players. That's never, EVER been a good sign.

    Ye, they did.

    Nevertheless, Rift was and is a massive success

    Merging servers has never, and will never, be a sign of success. It's a sign of decline. The most successful MMOs never hit their peak until their third or fourth year.

  • Bior337Bior337 Member Posts: 25
    Originally posted by mikahr
    Originally posted by Darkcrystal

    HAHAHAH, you call make million of dollars a failure????  Some people have no clue...

    Yah, when you need tens of millons just to stay afloat and youre making only millions its called a failure.

    So yah, ill give you a hint:

    get a clue

    Darkcrystal doesn't understand the difference between being in debt, and making a profit.

  • kartoolkartool Member UncommonPosts: 520
    Originally posted by sammandar
    Originally posted by grapevine

    Certainly not SW:TOR.  I'd say one of the following:-

    1) Auto Assault

    2) Wish (didn't even make it out of beta)

    3) APB (not Reloaded)

    4) FF XIV

    Leaning heavily towards (4).

    Consider how much money SWTOR cost to produce and develop (at least $200mil), the cast of voice actors hired to do the voice overs and the names behind the game (Bioware, EA, Star Wars) and you're telling us that 1-4 were a bigger failure? I think not my friend.

    There have certainly been other failures in the mmo genre, but by far I would consider SWTOR to be biggest failure of them all. Just my opinion of course :-)

    What does the cost have to do with the failure aspect? Since no one but EA and Bioware have any exact financial numbers about TOR it's a moot point. The game isn't closed down, so it's not a failure - it's still making money. It did fail to meet expectations, but the game itself hasn't failed. 

    F2P is a change in business model. SWTOR being a complete failure would end with the game closing down and ceasing to make any money at all. Is TOR a disappointment for many people? Yes it is, myself included. Will f2p bring people back to the game? I believe it will. It's been shown time and again with LoTRO, DCUO, DDO, etc. etc. that f2p is a perfectly viable business model and in most cases makes a game more profitable.

    I re-subbed for a month out of curiousity and populations were healthy at early to mid-game. I didn't play enough to get to the higher level stuff because GW2 came out and I've been wasting my time there. What I saw in game was a night and day difference in server populations since they merged servers. They've made some improvements and if the game keeps trucking along it's possible it could go the way of AoC - a healthy game with a terrible reputation.

  • kartoolkartool Member UncommonPosts: 520
    Originally posted by mikahr
    Originally posted by Darkcrystal

    HAHAHAH, you call make million of dollars a failure????  Some people have no clue...

    Yah, when you need tens of millons just to stay afloat and youre making only millions its called a failure.

    So yah, ill give you a hint:

    get a clue

    You don't really understand the concept of return on investment, do you? It often takes time for large projects to break even and start making money. If you think TOR isn't going to end up making money when it goes f2p you're living in a fantasy world. 

  • Bior337Bior337 Member Posts: 25
    Originally posted by kartool
    Originally posted by mikahr
    Originally posted by Darkcrystal

    HAHAHAH, you call make million of dollars a failure????  Some people have no clue...

    Yah, when you need tens of millons just to stay afloat and youre making only millions its called a failure.

    So yah, ill give you a hint:

    get a clue

    You don't really understand the concept of return on investment, do you? It often takes time for large projects to break even and start making money. If you think TOR isn't going to end up making money when it goes f2p you're living in a fantasy world. 

    Considering they've already had to fire half the staff and merge the servers, I don't think Bioware or EA expects to be making their money back any time soon, or they wouldn't be firing devs left and right.

    That, my friends, is a complete failure. You don't go into a new product PLANNING to get rid of your staff. Especially not on a product you hope to grow over the years.

     

    And yes, we DO have financial records stated by EA, and other inside sources. It would have taken them about 750k subs for a year and a half to make up just the money they spent on development, not even marketing (which was probably almost as large given all the coverage and CGI trailers). Currently, they don't even have 1/4 that many subs, and its been half a year.

     

    It is the most expensive MMO ever made, and it is without a doubt, an unmitigated failure.

  • gervaise1gervaise1 Member EpicPosts: 6,919
    Originally posted by Darkcrystal

    snip

    HAHAHAH, you call make million of dollars a failure????  Some people have no clue... Ya the game did not meet expectations, nether did GW2, or any other game... But a failure fair from it,  to funny, and I do not play SWTOR as of right now, so call people fanboys all day.

     

    Get a clue before you say a game fails, but if a game makes millions EA is laughing it up.... When it goes free they will make more just like DDO and LOTR did.. People/gamers today make me laugh, there is no such thing as a WOW killer, WOW came out when new gamers started the genre and Blizzard was a huge name....

    Get a clue

    Well the clue is what EA have said namely that:

    SWTOR needed "1M+ subscribers to make a profit but nothing to write home about" - source JR EA CEO. And Ea were talking long term subs at the time (which analysts took to be 1 to 2 years). Note: 1M subs for 2 years would cover SWTOR's costs (first 500k) and then repay c. $180M (the 500k-1M subs).

    And EA have never announced 1M+ "long term" subscribers. In Feb they announced 1.7M subs but subsequently clarified (in March) that just about half of these were continuing subs with the others being in their 30 day included period. So about 850k. Less than 1M.

    So - according to EA's own data - they have not currently made "a profit but nothing to write home about". They also said that they had planned for 1.2M subs - which would have recovered their costs + profit and after 1 or 2 years the game would have paid for itself and they would have been making huge profits.

    So no they haven't made millions - according to EA - they have lost money. So financially the game is a failure. And going forward, if the F2P model doesn't work, they may start to lose money on a day to day basis.

     

    The trick is not to mistake operating costs - what you need to run the game day to day - with development costs. Think of buying am apartment to rent out. You go to the bank and take out a loan. You rent out the house and get paid - and after you have covered the cost of finding tennents, cleaning, insurance, security, repairs you are making a profit - yippee! Still have the bank loan to pay off though .... 

  • kartoolkartool Member UncommonPosts: 520
    Originally posted by Bior337
    Originally posted by kartool
    Originally posted by mikahr
    Originally posted by Darkcrystal

    HAHAHAH, you call make million of dollars a failure????  Some people have no clue...

    Yah, when you need tens of millons just to stay afloat and youre making only millions its called a failure.

    So yah, ill give you a hint:

    get a clue

    You don't really understand the concept of return on investment, do you? It often takes time for large projects to break even and start making money. If you think TOR isn't going to end up making money when it goes f2p you're living in a fantasy world. 

    Considering they've already had to fire half the staff and merge the servers, I don't think Bioware or EA expects to be making their money back any time soon, or they wouldn't be firing devs left and right.

    That, my friends, is a complete failure. You don't go into a new product PLANNING to get rid of your staff. Especially not on a product you hope to grow over the years.

     

    And yes, we DO have financial records stated by EA, and other inside sources. It would have taken them about 750k subs for a year and a half to make up just the money they spent on development, not even marketing (which was probably almost as large given all the coverage and CGI trailers). Currently, they don't even have 1/4 that many subs, and its been half a year.

     

    It is the most expensive MMO ever made, and it is without a doubt, an unmitigated failure.

    So we have one source saying 500k subs, you saying 750k and someone else in this thread stating 1 million subs needed to break even. Inside sources? Like pissed off ex-employees who always stay impartial, huh.

    Is the game shut down? No. Therefore it's not a failure. It didn't meet expecations and until they shut it down and show the game never made any profit, it's not a failure. People call AoC a failure yet it's healthy and has another expac coming soon.

    This thread seems to not understand what actually constitutes failing in a business endeavour. If you run a business, you have to be able to change your business model according to market demand. Sticking to your plan no matter what is how you guarantee failure. Being able to change you business model and the direction of your product to better serve your customers or potential customers is how you succeed. This is what EA/Bioware are attempting to do.

    If we're talking about failing to compete with WoW, then I'll agree with you 100%, but that's not what we're talking about here. We're talking about the game itself failing which can't be determined yet.

     

  • Bior337Bior337 Member Posts: 25
    Originally posted by kartool
    Originally posted by Bior337
    Originally posted by kartool
    Originally posted by mikahr
    Originally posted by Darkcrystal

    HAHAHAH, you call make million of dollars a failure????  Some people have no clue...

    Yah, when you need tens of millons just to stay afloat and youre making only millions its called a failure.

    So yah, ill give you a hint:

    get a clue

    You don't really understand the concept of return on investment, do you? It often takes time for large projects to break even and start making money. If you think TOR isn't going to end up making money when it goes f2p you're living in a fantasy world. 

    Considering they've already had to fire half the staff and merge the servers, I don't think Bioware or EA expects to be making their money back any time soon, or they wouldn't be firing devs left and right.

    That, my friends, is a complete failure. You don't go into a new product PLANNING to get rid of your staff. Especially not on a product you hope to grow over the years.

     

    And yes, we DO have financial records stated by EA, and other inside sources. It would have taken them about 750k subs for a year and a half to make up just the money they spent on development, not even marketing (which was probably almost as large given all the coverage and CGI trailers). Currently, they don't even have 1/4 that many subs, and its been half a year.

     

    It is the most expensive MMO ever made, and it is without a doubt, an unmitigated failure.

    So we have one source saying 500k subs, you saying 750k and someone else in this thread stating 1 million subs needed to break even. Inside sources? Like pissed off ex-employees who always stay impartial, huh. A pissed off employee who has had his story confirmed by other people within the company, and who everything he said turned out to be true.

    Is the game shut down? No. Therefore it's not a failure. Vanguard is still around, I guess that wasn't a failure either? Or Horizons? It didn't meet expecations and until they shut it down and show the game never made any profit, it's not a failure. People call AoC a failure yet it's healthy and has another expac coming soon. AoC bankrupted two companies and made a ton of people lose their jobs. They limp along with less subs than MMOs from the 90s have.

     

    There's a good reason its called Tortanic. The biggest MMO ever built, more money lavished on it than any title to date. Two of the biggest development studios in the genre, the biggest science fiction IP in the world.

    And a few months after launch and it is completely dead in the water, half the staff fired, most of the servers closed, and its being forced to go free just to find an audience.

    I don't know how you manage to delude yourself into thinking that it didn't FAIL in what it tried to do.

  • teakboisteakbois Member Posts: 2,154
    Originally posted by Bior337
    Originally posted by Pelaaja
    Originally posted by Tibernicus
    Originally posted by smh_alot
    Originally posted by itgrowls

     Rift actually took more players from WoW then any other title so far, around 2mil. And now WoW has some of Rift's features trying to get those players back in MoP. AOE looting anyone? LOL Oh i know you're not making this stuff up, people will argue with you about it but i have the launch and prelaunch videos and the articles with that stuff in them.

     

    ? Wtf... lol, Rift didn't even have that many players, 2mil, let alone that they all got stolen from WoW. This sounds like utter made up nonsense.

    It IS absolute nonsense. Rift already had to merge servers because they lost so many players. That's never, EVER been a good sign.

    Ye, they did.

    Nevertheless, Rift was and is a massive success

    Merging servers has never, and will never, be a sign of success. It's a sign of decline. The most successful MMOs never hit their peak until their third or fourth year.

    wait, did someone actually claim Rift took 2 million of WoW's players?  At peak ft had 600k, and that was launch month.  By the end of the year it was down to 300k (250k is the mmodata estimate).  Now its even less.  56 NA servers are now down to 6-8 active ones.  I could see SL being a great expansion and maybe bumping it back up to 300k, but thats if the content rises above being 'more of the same.'

     

    As for the thread topic, SWTOR currently has the second most subs in the region, and it probably isnt in any danger of falling any lower than that.  To say its a bigger failure than games that have had to close down is ludicrous.  The odds of SWTOOR making its money back are high, its just going to take a longer time than EA wanted.

  • I actually think Tabula Rasa is one of the biggest MMo failures to date. If SWTOR was already shutting down then maybe, but they are adjusting to a more profitable revenue stream so I don't see it as a failure at all. Yeah the gameplay was not very enjoyable, but a failure it was not. At least not till they shut it down.
  • Bior337Bior337 Member Posts: 25
    Originally posted by teakbois
    Originally posted by Bior337
    Originally posted by Pelaaja
    Originally posted by Tibernicus
    Originally posted by smh_alot
    Originally posted by itgrowls

     Rift actually took more players from WoW then any other title so far, around 2mil. And now WoW has some of Rift's features trying to get those players back in MoP. AOE looting anyone? LOL Oh i know you're not making this stuff up, people will argue with you about it but i have the launch and prelaunch videos and the articles with that stuff in them.

     

    ? Wtf... lol, Rift didn't even have that many players, 2mil, let alone that they all got stolen from WoW. This sounds like utter made up nonsense.

    It IS absolute nonsense. Rift already had to merge servers because they lost so many players. That's never, EVER been a good sign.

    Ye, they did.

    Nevertheless, Rift was and is a massive success

    Merging servers has never, and will never, be a sign of success. It's a sign of decline. The most successful MMOs never hit their peak until their third or fourth year.

     As for the thread topic, SWTOR currently has the second most subs in the region, and it probably isnt in any danger of falling any lower than that.  To say its a bigger failure than games that have had to close down is ludicrous.  The odds of SWTOOR making its money back are high, its just going to take a longer time than EA wanted.

    All sources show that subs have TANKED. Of course EA hasn't reported this, but virtually every other news source has. Their last numbers released (about 4 months ago) included all the accounts they gave free time to.

    So no, they don't. And I'm pretty sure when you lose most of your staff and most of your servers, on the most expensive MMO ever made, with the STAR WARS IP...you're a failure.

  • waynejr2waynejr2 Member EpicPosts: 7,769
    Originally posted by namelessbob
    I actually think Tabula Rasa is one of the biggest MMo failures to date. If SWTOR was already shutting down then maybe, but they are adjusting to a more profitable revenue stream so I don't see it as a failure at all. Yeah the gameplay was not very enjoyable, but a failure it was not. At least not till they shut it down.

    I would go with TR being a bigger failure than swtor.  Swtor seems like a big deal due to the amount of money spent to produce the game.

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  • Bior337Bior337 Member Posts: 25
    Originally posted by namelessbob
    I actually think Tabula Rasa is one of the biggest MMo failures to date. If SWTOR was already shutting down then maybe, but they are adjusting to a more profitable revenue stream so I don't see it as a failure at all. Yeah the gameplay was not very enjoyable, but a failure it was not. At least not till they shut it down.

    They're going free to play because no one wants to play their game and they're bleeding subs, staff, and servers.

    That's failure every way you cut it.

  • kartoolkartool Member UncommonPosts: 520
    Originally posted by Bior337
    Originally posted by kartool
    Originally posted by Bior337
    Originally posted by kartool
    Originally posted by mikahr
    Originally posted by Darkcrystal

    HAHAHAH, you call make million of dollars a failure????  Some people have no clue...

    Yah, when you need tens of millons just to stay afloat and youre making only millions its called a failure.

    So yah, ill give you a hint:

    get a clue

    You don't really understand the concept of return on investment, do you? It often takes time for large projects to break even and start making money. If you think TOR isn't going to end up making money when it goes f2p you're living in a fantasy world. 

    Considering they've already had to fire half the staff and merge the servers, I don't think Bioware or EA expects to be making their money back any time soon, or they wouldn't be firing devs left and right.

    That, my friends, is a complete failure. You don't go into a new product PLANNING to get rid of your staff. Especially not on a product you hope to grow over the years.

     

    And yes, we DO have financial records stated by EA, and other inside sources. It would have taken them about 750k subs for a year and a half to make up just the money they spent on development, not even marketing (which was probably almost as large given all the coverage and CGI trailers). Currently, they don't even have 1/4 that many subs, and its been half a year.

     

    It is the most expensive MMO ever made, and it is without a doubt, an unmitigated failure.

    So we have one source saying 500k subs, you saying 750k and someone else in this thread stating 1 million subs needed to break even. Inside sources? Like pissed off ex-employees who always stay impartial, huh. A pissed off employee who has had his story confirmed by other people within the company, and who everything he said turned out to be true.

    Is the game shut down? No. Therefore it's not a failure. Vanguard is still around, I guess that wasn't a failure either? Or Horizons? It didn't meet expecations and until they shut it down and show the game never made any profit, it's not a failure. People call AoC a failure yet it's healthy and has another expac coming soon. AoC bankrupted two companies and made a ton of people lose their jobs. They limp along with less subs than MMOs from the 90s have.

     

    There's a good reason its called Tortanic. The biggest MMO ever built, more money lavished on it than any title to date. Two of the biggest development studios in the genre, the biggest science fiction IP in the world.

    And a few months after launch and it is completely dead in the water, half the staff fired, most of the servers closed, and its being forced to go free just to find an audience.

    I don't know how you manage to delude yourself into thinking that it didn't FAIL in what it tried to do.

    I am talking about SWTOR as a business, not as a game. As a game it failed to meet expecatations, it failed to do what the developers wanted it to do. As a business, they are simply changing the business model to better serve or attract customers in order to make money. If the game had no chance of being profitable they would cut their losses and shut it down. If the game can still be profitable or is profitable, then it's not a failure. Job losses have nothing to do with it. If they did then GM would be failure, Microsoft would be a failure, etc. because they've all gone through periods where they've made massive cutbacks to their work force.

    We'll see what happens when it goes f2p, that's about all there is to this entire argument. Switching business models doesn't mean something has failed.

  • gervaise1gervaise1 Member EpicPosts: 6,919
    Originally posted by kartool

    So we have one source saying 500k subs, you saying 750k and someone else in this thread stating 1 million subs needed to break even. Inside sources? Like pissed off ex-employees who always stay impartial, huh.

    Is the game shut down? No. Therefore it's not a failure. It didn't meet expecations and until they shut it down and show the game never made any profit, it's not a failure. People call AoC a failure yet it's healthy and has another expac coming soon.

    This thread seems to not understand what actually constitutes failing in a business endeavour. If you run a business, you have to be able to change your business model according to market demand. Sticking to your plan no matter what is how you guarantee failure. Being able to change you business model and the direction of your product to better serve your customers or potential customers is how you succeed. This is what EA/Bioware are attempting to do.

     

     

    There are two numbers kartool. Both provided by EA. You can go and read the presentations and so forth here: http://investor.ea.com/

    The 500k number is to cover the day to day costs; the wages of the staff currently employed and whatever other stuff EA include. The 1M number is to cover the running costs - with the first 500k subs - and the start to pay back the development costs. That is why I gave you an analogy of borrwing money to buy and then rent out an apartment. Like I say you can get all the numbers yourself on the EA investor page.

    So financially it is a major failure. In other ways maybe not.

    As for changing business models that will be "interesting". If the numbers provided by Zynga hold true - that they get most of their money from c. 5% of the ir playerbase (it varies a  bit but all the info is on the Zynga investors page) then they are going to need millions of F2P players to get the same amount of revenue.

     

  • gervaise1gervaise1 Member EpicPosts: 6,919
    Originally posted by kartool
    Originally posted by mikahr
    Originally posted by Darkcrystal

    HAHAHAH, you call make million of dollars a failure????  Some people have no clue...

    Yah, when you need tens of millons just to stay afloat and youre making only millions its called a failure.

    So yah, ill give you a hint:

    get a clue

    You don't really understand the concept of return on investment, do you? It often takes time for large projects to break even and start making money. If you think TOR isn't going to end up making money when it goes f2p you're living in a fantasy world. 

    There are games designed, launched and run as F2P from day 1 are making a profit. currently however there is no company released data that point to a sub-based game making a profit. The announced closure of CoH indicates that a conversion may not be successful; and they were running the game with just 80 staff.

    Sure large projects can indeed take time to recover their investment but - at some point in the future - EA will have to decide whether they want to renew the IP. 

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