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报告翻译问题
But of course, there will always be fools who line up at the cinema to pay more still to see a movie on release night - not knowing if it's even worth their time let alone the money. The equivalent of pre-ordering games.
Timeliness is not indicative of quality.
Who said timeliness was indicative of quality? Please, name that person. I thought this specific discussion was tied directly to wait time for a native port. I do like your analogy though for how to look at the release of old games and I completely agree and appreciate the visualization of it but that does not change the fact that 3 years is a long wait for a new release of a game that is out as a new release today.... and we are talking about native ports.
You may have glossed over some additional details with the rental store story. I too remember the rental stores. I remember going to the video store to rent a movie that had just been released but if that new movie had been rented out due to obvious demand for that NEW rental... and I could not get that new rental, I definitely would have, like most people, checked the next best thing --the 4 month older grouping of movies or the weekly suggested staffer picks.
Another thing, the newly released movie at the video store did not come out several months or a years after the release at the theater... that newly released movie at the rental store was still considered a new movie and highly desired. Just like a newly released games, there was not a new high quality movie coming out every week at the rental store but there were those specific new movies that when they were scheduled to be avaiilable for rental caused a frenzy and people wanted them day one. I also remember people becoming irate with the rental store if they called to get a new movie promised ito be there by a clerk but was rented out before the renter reached the store or they were simply provided erroneous information and it had not infact released for rental--- they were infuriated.
I agree; however, most people are willing to wait a few weeks or conduct a few months of research to gain general insight into whether a game has value. Buying a game on day one... is unecessary, however waiting 3 years or more for a port of a game that is out right now that I could play on any other system or OS is a pill hard to swallow. Three years is my max wait time...
I guess I am the only person that feels this way though in the forum. I do have Fable in my Steam wishlist, that is outside of my 3 year rule, but it is the newly remastered HD release Anniversary Edition which is relatively still new. Ultimately I guess we are in agreeance in some ways for this topic but maybe both of us are not seeing it.... yeah, nothing wrong with older games because they can be fun but dernit' waiting for a native linux port for over three years and being ok with that is not acceptable because we want the new games. Can we agree on that LoL.... going to stop here because I think we hijacked this thread into a direction unintended.
Not sure what you meant by the post but Borderlands, though not natively, could be played when it came out through Wine --still can be today, though all of the recent Borderlands within the three year window are native. Farcry4... God, I wish though highly doubtfull there will be a port and may not ever be able to be played on Wine but all the previous ones were able to be played using Wine.
I pre-ordered and bought Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel at day one only to reward Aspyr for their effort. I played a dozen or so hours, then returned to Borderlands 1 (on WINE), to complete all the DLCs - and I'll move to Borderlands 2 once done. Old games? Who cares! They are still fun and my rig today runs them in such a glorious way that was simply impossible five years ago when it was a novelty.
Won't run yet.
-http://linux.softpedia.com/blog/Divinity-Original-Sin-For-Linux-Will-Launch-with-Improved-Engine-and-Gameplay-467989.shtml