On the contrary, I'd be more interested to know what has caused this weird Capcom trauma for some of you. I heard only good things about SFV gameplay, all their recent remasters are good, RE7 was amazing and MH Worlds looks amazing. Are some people still *that* angry because they neglected Megaman or something?
Well, there's a lot more to it than just Mega Man being relegated to Saturday morning cartoons, and I don't even need to go further than this past year:
-despite the long overdue but much appreciated remasters of the first couple of Dead Rising games, Dead Rising 4 was exactly as feared: an excessively dumbed down take on the series that pissed fans off and failed to do what it was intended to by getting no newcomers interested in the series, leaving the fate of the entire IP in jeopardy
-while the core of SFV is strong, Capcom has done a lot to make it easy to ignore that part of it by fucking up everything else, whether it's the slow content rollout that still finds itself delayed past expected windows, nickel and diming costumes and stages that are available for only a limited time, and still not updating the game with basic features found in virtually every other fighting game
-the reaction to MvC:I has been sharply divided since its announcement, to say the least, and the recent demo has done little to quell those fears, leaving a sense that the game is going to be coming in pretty hot this September; all this, and that's not even getting into the unexpected surprise of the similar but substantially more exciting Dragon Ball Fighter Z, which is looking to be a major contender to Capcom's previously uncontested crown for over-the-top versus fighters
-being an Ace Attorney fan in 2017
-after a mostly solid localization record in recent memory, MHXX not being confirmed for localization has taken the fan base back to the wild days of old, where nothing was guaranteed and we're lucky to get even some of the content of the titles that got skipped over: only this time, it's a game where most of the localization work is already done and strikes everyone as an especially egregious bout of utter stupidity with how hot the Switch has been worldwide, making it easy money for not only the fan base that Capcom is leaving on the table, but also saying they're not interested in taking the money of new Switch owners who have been pretty receptive to just about anything that gets tossed their way
RE7 has been a rather unexpected bright spot for them, but it is sadly more the exception than it is the rule.