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originally posted by: stolencar18
a reply to: IgnoranceIsntBlisss
This sounds to me like the rant of someone who wants to win for free.
originally posted by: amazing
It's a small microcosm of real life. You can take shortcuts but you'll pay in the end, or you can put in hard work and succeed on your own, without giving into the temptation of instant gratification.
originally posted by: Aazadan
originally posted by: amazing
It's a small microcosm of real life. You can take shortcuts but you'll pay in the end, or you can put in hard work and succeed on your own, without giving into the temptation of instant gratification.
Growth in these games typically follows a logarithmic curve, once you hit a certain point it's impossible to make meaningful gains anymore unless you pay money.
Kind of like real life, if you work hard you'll top out at a mid level position and never get anything bigger without the assistance of a rich benefactor.
originally posted by: amazing
False.
Again, in clash of Clans-Supercell for example. there is no limit...you don't have to pay to advance or grow or enjoy the game, You can if you would like a shortcut without the hard work.
I'm growing large without a rich benefactor. I'm paying off debt, buying motorcycles and giant screen tvs, ejoying my ginormous pool and enjoying life, BECAUSE of my hard work.
originally posted by: amazingBut how is any of that relevant to our conversation? What is your point?
The point is that if you work hard enough, you can obtain anything.
originally posted by: Aazadan
originally posted by: amazingBut how is any of that relevant to our conversation? What is your point?
That you have several wealthy benefactors. There's certain things you as an individual can do to increase your chance at success. Mindset is part of it, connections are part of it, being willing to work is part of it, luck is part of it, having a good idea is part of it, being at the right place at the right time is part of it. You can still do all of that right though, and your success or lack of it is still completely determined by others. Bank terms, city planning, others willing to compete with you, and more.
Bringing this back to these games, you can do everything right in them and you will still lose because someone has better funding than you. Perhaps this is due to my view on competition, competition creates losers, there is only one winner. If you're comparing scores you are either at the top or you did something wrong. If you are comparing game status you are either the most developed player, or you did something wrong. And so on, and this is where freemium really bothers me because part of being the most developed player also involves paying the most money. If someone pays $10 a day and you pay $10 a month, then given equal ability you will never beat them and it ceases to become a game.
The point is that if you work hard enough, you can obtain anything.
No amount of work overcomes a pay wall. This is just as true in these games as it is in life. At some point, you're going to get big enough where the only way to move up is to start paying off others.
originally posted by: amazingHard work is the determining factor though. I still don't understand why you think hard work isn't key?
I'm going to put some thought into this and make a thread about success and what it really takes and what it is.
originally posted by: amazing
But is it really bad because it teaches the core truth of reality as well.
What is that?
That patience and hard work pay off and that you can succeed by playing by your own rules.
originally posted by: amazing
The point is that if you work hard enough, you can obtain anything.
originally posted by: IgnoranceIsntBlisss
originally posted by: amazing
But is it really bad because it teaches the core truth of reality as well.
What is that?
That patience and hard work pay off and that you can succeed by playing by your own rules.
You cant play these games by your own rules.
What it does is hard wire their developing brains to lose any sense of ambition. Just wait, and wait, and wait to get basically nothing.
It teaches them to be gullible lackluster deadbeat chumps.
Although there is the argument that the world is set to screw every newly born person even harder than the last. I make this argument.
Which is part of my odds with this model because it teaches them to ubiquitously take this notion as reality, meaning they will have no hope of even perceiving it as a problem, and therefore never rise up in any way to do anything about changing it.
originally posted by: amazing
The point is that if you work hard enough, you can obtain anything.
In the real world, sure, although less & less (unless maybe you're a freemium game startup).
.
California man spent $1 million playing Game of War
Mobile game described as "like gambling, but with no possibility of winning."
A 45-year-old California man pleaded guilty in federal court Thursday to ripping off $4.8 million from his employer. Notably, the man admitted to spending $1 million of that bonanza on Game of War.
The mobile-phone game is developed by Machine Zone and heavily advertised by model Kate Upton. It's one of the top-grossing mobile games in the world, according to Adweek. And now we know why, at least in part.
Kevin Lee Co admitted in Sacramento federal court that,from May 2008 to March 2015, he embezzled nearly $5 million from his controller job at a heavy-equipment company called Holt California. He admitted in his guilty plea (PDF) to spending "approximately $1 million" on Game of War. He also admitted to getting plastic surgery and buying season tickets to the San Francisco 49ers and the Sacramento Kings. The record also showed Co bought "luxury cars" and a golf club membership.
We've read reports about players spending thousands of dollars on Game of War, which bills itself as "the world's largest multiplayer strategy game." It's raking in more than $1 million daily, but we've never seen a personal tab this high to date.