Your point is valid, but this is a pretty poor supporting example. The whole game is about to be replaced.Vigilant Walrus said:SWG(bring back pre-NGE)
Your point is valid, but this is a pretty poor supporting example. The whole game is about to be replaced.Vigilant Walrus said:SWG(bring back pre-NGE)
"We've discovered a large number of our userbase rent houses just to play Call of Duty, but we're not a part of that revenue stream... yet"Green Biker Dude said:either way, if they're using windows, wouldn't they need a customized version and in turn, still depend on microsoft? lol
So much correctness, so early in the thread, too.Mama Robotnik said:I'd support nearly any effort to provide alternatives to closed platforms.
But I trust Kotick about as much as I'd trust an angry, hungry and rabid rattlesnake in my trousers.
Vormund said:In all seriousness, why don't they just make their own console then?
KHarvey16 said:Because it would be incredibly expensive.
Vormund said:In all seriousness, why don't they just make their own console then?
I want to say something witty in response to this but I can't stop crying...aeolist said:[im g]http://i46.tinypic.com/2enw2uu.jpg[/img]
:lolWeve heard that 60 per cent of [Microsofts] subscribers are principally on Live because of Call of Duty, says Mr Kotick.
Jewbacca said:I dont see how this will happen when you have dozens of different chipsets and a million different graphics cards. A PC is as strong as its communities weakest link. So where do you draw the line for offering that CONSTANT clean gaming/entertainment experience. That is why the console industry is so successful, you have 3 companies atm that each offer their experience, you buy into the experience. You dont have to worry about specifications, or how well it will run, the game is tailored to exploit the benefits of the console. With PC's you chose your experience, do you want an internet machine? Are you going to play games? How much? Do you want cutting age graphics?
The only way I can see a one console future is maybe with a mac-like effort where everything is done in house with very little variation in hardware choice. Oh wait, so what we really want is a console with a versitle fuctioning operating system.
So he's not a money-grubbing monster, he's just doing whatever it takes to make more money. Gotcha.Opiate said:I know Kotick is incredibly disliked on GAF, but the notion that he is a money grubbing monster really doesn't stand up empirically.
It would be one thing if publishers were raking in money hand over fist, and Activision was going well beyond that and producing gross margins using anti-competitive behavior.
But that isn't the situation. Most of these companies -- particularly EA, a favorite of many GAF members now -- are losing significant amounts of money, and what they're doing simply isn't sustainable. Kotick is looking for financially sustainable methods to produce these games, and that either requires making games with far lower production values (which few people seems to want) or finding new revenue streams.
It would be like Ferrari offering all their cars for free. Would that be cool? I'm sure car enthusiasts would be very excited, and in the short term that's amazing for consumers. However, Ferrari would also be bankrupt in a matter of days, if not hours. In the long term, this is bad for consumers. No more Ferraris, ever again.
I am not suggesting that Activision's solutions are the only plausible ones, but they are one of few companies that seem to be making rational attempts to make this blockbuster-games model sustainable long term. You can either 1) Reject the big budget blockbuster model, or 2) Figure out ways to make more money off those Blockbusters. Activision is choosing option 2.
I personally would vastly prefer option 1, but I think there's a fairly strong contingent of GAFfers who don't want to give up the blockbuster games model, and I'm not sure those people have thought this all the way through. Or they haven't looked at Publisher's financial results over the last half decade.
Opiate said:I know Kotick is incredibly disliked on GAF, but the notion that he is a money grubbing monster really doesn't stand up empirically.
It would be one thing if publishers were raking in money hand over fist, and Activision was going well beyond that and producing gross margins using anti-competitive behavior.
But that isn't the situation. Most of these companies -- particularly EA, a favorite of many GAF members now -- are losing significant amounts of money, and what they're doing simply isn't sustainable. Kotick is looking for financially sustainable methods to produce these games, and that either requires making games with far lower production values (which few people seems to want) or finding new revenue streams.
It would be like Ferrari offering all their cars for free. Would that be cool? I'm sure car enthusiasts would be very excited, and in the short term that's amazing for consumers. However, Ferrari would also be bankrupt in a matter of days, if not hours. In the long term, this is bad for consumers. No more Ferraris, ever again.
I am not suggesting that Activision's solutions are the only plausible ones, but they are one of few companies that seem to be making rational attempts to make this blockbuster-games model sustainable long term. You can either 1) Reject the big budget blockbuster model, or 2) Figure out ways to make more money off those Blockbusters. Activision is choosing option 2.
I personally would vastly prefer option 1, but I think there's a fairly strong contingent of GAFfers who don't want to give up the blockbuster games model, and I'm not sure those people have thought this all the way through. Or they haven't looked at Publisher's financial results over the last half decade.
Lord Error said:PC is really only popular in the sense of playing casualware like WoW, Facebook games and other such online games, but for the kind of games that we (and Kottick apparently) want it to be popular, it's nowhere near there. People are just not buying enough gaming oriented graphics cards, although that may change with upcoming better integrated solutions.
Also, do we really want to have situation where big PC publishers are going to have their online models they charge for just to play games like CoD? That seems to be exactly what he wants to do.
Exactly. They left it and its changed without their input. What is Bobby Kotick going to do? Ditch the 360/PS3 and go to the PC.. the platform that sold 3% of MW2s total numbers? (i tried to find updated sales numbers for MW2 PC but can only find that one figure the first launch month.. afterwards its like PC sales statistics are scrubbed clean of any press releases)Mrbob said:Now they can't cultivate that market since it has already evolved. Free to play is a hot aspect to get people to play your game.
Low profit margins, probably. Their profit margins are all pretty low (except for Apple, I guess)Mrbob said:I'm surprised no PC vendor has attempted to push the home theater PC concept further. Even a 500 or 600 dollar setup could be fairly successful.
ghst said:the death knell of closed platforms? now there's something we can all get behind, regardless of bobby's diabloical subcription-based intentions.
Some of the stuff this generation is similar to ferrari modifying the car to only run on gas sold by ferrari, or filling the tires with a non-air compound that performs worse than air.Opiate said:I know Kotick is incredibly disliked on GAF, but the notion that he is a money grubbing monster really doesn't stand up empirically.
It would be one thing if publishers were raking in money hand over fist, and Activision was going well beyond that and producing gross margins using anti-competitive behavior.
But that isn't the situation. Most of these companies -- particularly EA, a favorite of many GAF members now -- are losing significant amounts of money, and what they're doing simply isn't sustainable. Kotick is looking for financially sustainable methods to produce these games, and that either requires making games with far lower production values (which few people seems to want) or finding new revenue streams.
It would be like Ferrari offering all their cars for free. Would that be cool? I'm sure car enthusiasts would be very excited, and in the short term that's amazing for consumers. However, Ferrari would also be bankrupt in a matter of days, if not hours. In the long term, this is bad for consumers. No more Ferraris, ever again.
I am not suggesting that Activision's solutions are the only plausible ones, but they are one of few companies that seem to be making rational attempts to make this blockbuster-games model sustainable long term. You can either 1) Reject the big budget blockbuster model, or 2) Figure out ways to make more money off those Blockbusters. Activision is choosing option 2.
I personally would vastly prefer option 1, but I think there's a fairly strong contingent of GAFfers who don't want to give up the blockbuster games model, and I'm not sure those people have thought this all the way through. Or they haven't looked at Publisher's financial results over the last half decade.
Segata Sanshiro said:So he's not a money-grubbing monster, he's just doing whatever it takes to make more money. Gotcha.
his employment may make business sense but his mouth spews bile.
it's possible to remain profitable in games with safe choices and still respect the industry
I don't think anyone thinks he's doing things that are illegal per se. He just pushes the boundaries of good taste, is very open about his low opinion of his customers, and sometimes adopts short-term slash 'n' burn tactics that are probably unhealthy in the long-term. The man cares only about profit and seems to have little interest in games or even human beings. These qualities make him quite an executive. They also make him a disgusting excuse for a human being and no friend to a consumer in this hobby.Opiate said:Again, this would be far more objectionable if EA/Take 2/THQ and the like were making lots of money, and Activision were simply trying to make even more money. Or if they were doing something explicitly illegal, like anti competitive behavior, or something.
That's not the situation. Somebody has to figure out how to make actually make a profit.
Absolutely. I'm not defending everything Kotick says or does: he's definitely made some poor choices and can seem curt or rude. And in fact, for my personal tastes in gaming, basically everything he's doing is bad for me. I don't want Call of Duty, I do not play WoW, and I almost never enjoy "blockbuster" games. I'm just trying to show why some people here might not want to rag him quite so much: if you love Call of Duty / Gears of War /etc and would like to see those games continue to grow in the next decade, someone has to make some unpopular decisions, and that person is Kotick.
Segata Sanshiro said:I don't think anyone thinks he's doing things that are illegal per se. He just pushes the boundaries of good taste, is very open about his low opinion of his customers, and sometimes adopts short-term slash 'n' burn tactics that are probably unhealthy in the long-term. The man cares only about profit and seems to have little interest in games or even human beings. These qualities make him quite an executive. They also make him a disgusting excuse for a human being and no friend to a consumer in this hobby.
Was riding Guitar Hero into the ground until it died really what was best for investors? And Tony Hawk? And closing decent development houses because they didn't want to churn out yearly sequels? And chasing away the brain trust of the company's most valuable series because he didn't want to pay out bonuses and allow them a little creativity?Opiate said:He can definitely be curt: again, I'm not excusing all of his behavior. However, most of the strategies he employs are the natural consequence of making games with 40 Million+ budgets. It is the only practical way to handle a company that is making decisions of that size, and honestly, I would even argue it's immoral to behave less ruthlessly in such cases. It's investor money. If we're talking small projects, it might be okay to take a hippie-ish approach to your production. Make things for the love of gaming, and what not. I certainly appreciate it, and typically investors can be indulgent when we're discussing smaller portions of revenue.
That simply isn't okay when you're talking about 40, 50, or even 100 Million dollars of investor money.
So, again, we've either got to stop spending so much money, or we have to accept that Kotick's approach is closer to the sustainable paradigm than Riccitielo's, as an example. And very few people seem to like the "stop spending lots of money" answer, so that doesn't leave us with many solutions.
Isn't WoW revenue the only thing keeping Activision in the black? I don't think Kotick has much to do with that. He seems to be having the same problems everyone else does with $20+ million console games.Segata Sanshiro said:Blizzard will ensure that Activision doesn't go under, and that's lucky for Bobby, I guess.
Bobby Kotick said:blah blah blah I want monies PC has monies blah blah blah
So after endless threadshitting on behalf of mods/open standards/Activision is Satan and MW2 is his mark, suddenly none of that matters once The Kotick starts with the "MISS U SO MCH PC XOXOXO" messages.ghst said:the death knell of closed platforms? now there's something we can all get behind, regardless of bobby's diabloical subcription-based intentions.
Opiate said:On topic: It's an interesting problem, isn't it? Let's say, as an example, that Kotick could charge 4 dollars per month to play CoD online.
If that were on the PC, many XBL members might not take issue with it, because they're already paying 4 dollars to play CoD online (if Kotick's figure of 60 percent are correct), it shouldn't trouble them to do so on the PC -- it's just that the money is going to the game maker rather than Microsoft.
I have consistently been a proponent of XBL Gold, because I saw how much money Sony/MS were losing and knew they had to find new revenue streams to compensate for it. I also predicted Sony would start a subscription service far before Microsoft stopped charging (which has happened).
But I hadn't considered how the software companies might start feeling the pinch as well, and would want to monetize the online independently. And it's going to be very hard to convince people to 1) Pay for high speed internet 2) Pay for XBL Gold 3) Pay Activision to play Call of Duty. Three separate subscriptions to three separate companies every month, and that's if you only want to play a single game. God forbid if you wanted to play CoD and Battlefield in a single month.
I have no idea how this will be resolved, but now that I see the problem, I believe it's going to get very complicated.
pcostabel said:Sounds a bit like the Phantom. This approach (standardized cheap PC) will never work because to successfully launch a platform you need strong support from the console manufacturer, that typically loses money on the hardware and makes it back on the software. Dell and HP can't afford to sell hardware at a loss.
DeadTrees said:So after endless threadshitting on behalf of mods/open standards/Activision is Satan and MW2 is his mark, suddenly none of that matters once The Kotick starts with the "MISS U SO MCH PC XOXOXO" messages.
Oh Uncle ghst, tell us all some more stories of your wild and reckless youth, when you burned rubber in your '72 Camaro and swore that hot chicks and dedicated servers would never die!
Opiate said:I know Kotick is incredibly disliked on GAF, but the notion that he is a money grubbing monster really doesn't stand up empirically.
Fredescu said:Your point is valid, but this is a pretty poor supporting example. The whole game is about to be replaced.
H_Prestige said:WTF is this guy talking about? You can already hook up a PC to a TV. A TV is just another kind of monitor.
Opiate said:He can definitely be curt: again, I'm not excusing all of his behavior. However, most of the strategies he employs are the natural consequence of making games with 40 Million+ budgets. It is the only practical way to handle a company that is making decisions of that size, and honestly, I would even argue it's immoral to behave less ruthlessly in such cases. It's investor money. If we're talking small projects, it might be okay to take a hippie-ish approach to your production. Make things for the love of gaming, and what not. I certainly appreciate it, and typically investors can be indulgent when we're discussing smaller portions of revenue.
That simply isn't okay when you're talking about 40, 50, or even 100 Million dollars of investor money.
So, again, we've either got to stop spending so much money, or we have to accept that Kotick's approach is closer to the sustainable paradigm than Riccitielo's, as an example. And very few people seem to like the "stop spending lots of money" answer, so that doesn't leave us with many solutions.
Lord Error said:, it's nowhere near there. People are just not buying enough gaming oriented graphics cards, although that may change with upcoming better integrated solutions.
ghst said:full article here: http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/activision-stays-ahead-of-game-market-ftimes-6db82447d3b3.html
the death knell of closed platforms? now there's something we can all get behind, regardless of bobby's diabloical subcription-based intentions.
Vigilant Walrus said:You also have many people that don't like Crysis. It's an incredible game, but if you get into the gritty of it, many people couldn't deal with the open ended world structure of it. I think many are intimidated by it, as it doesn't feed your hand like CoD for example.
Consoles don't have a unified online system either. Xbox Live and PSN are incompatible. Neither one works with whatever the Wii has.Mr_Brit said:One advantage of closed systems is a unified online system. That is something PC gaming will never have.
Upgrades will be coming to consoles soon I am sure, its the next thing from PC's they will adopt. Of course it will be more straightforward, a GPU black box that disconnects, plug-in your new ($150) GPU+ black box, download the Halo5 GPU+ patch and you are now at 60fps and have improved anti-aliasing, six months down the line the GPU+ only games start to appear. The "have to upgrade every year" anti-PC console players will adopt it faster than the MW2 PC players betrayed their pledge.charsace said:Console gaming will always be around because of price and the upgrade process. Even if there were $400 gaming pcs people would stick to consoles. The upgrade cycle of PC's will scare people off because within 12-16 months their gaming PC won't be "top of the line," when the the PS3, XBOX360 and WII have been the "top of the line," consoles for years now. All Activision is going to do is hasten the death of Call of Duty.
Mr_Brit said:One advantage of closed systems is a unified online system. That is something PC gaming will never have.
If the bolded happens console gaming is dead. It defeats the purpose of console gaming. You also eliminate a good portion of customers by doing this.poppabk said:Upgrades will be coming to consoles soon I am sure, its the next thing from PC's they will adopt. Of course it will be more straightforward, a GPU black box that disconnects, plug-in your new ($150) GPU+ black box, download the Halo5 GPU+ patch and you are now at 60fps and have improved anti-aliasing, six months down the line the GPU+ only games start to appear. The "have to upgrade every year" anti-PC console players will adopt it faster than the MW2 PC players betrayed their pledge.
As for my take on Kotick's statement, I'm pretty sure he sees it as this - CoD in one form or another drives 60% of Live subscriptions - so maybe 6 million subscriptions at $50 a piece, every year - so they are the driving force behind $300 million in revenue for MS - and probably $250 million in profit each year. They already paid MS when they paid the licensing fees, so why should they be missing out on the revenue they are directly driving.
I don't think he wants an open system, he wants an open hardware system that he can run his own closed software system on.
Eh, that not an advantage.Mr_Brit said:One advantage of closed systems is a unified online system. That is something PC gaming will never have.