Steam telepítése
belépés
|
nyelv
简体中文 (egyszerűsített kínai)
繁體中文 (hagyományos kínai)
日本語 (japán)
한국어 (koreai)
ไทย (thai)
Български (bolgár)
Čeština (cseh)
Dansk (dán)
Deutsch (német)
English (angol)
Español - España (spanyolországi spanyol)
Español - Latinoamérica (latin-amerikai spanyol)
Ελληνικά (görög)
Français (francia)
Italiano (olasz)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonéz)
Nederlands (holland)
Norsk (norvég)
Polski (lengyel)
Português (portugáliai portugál)
Português - Brasil (brazíliai portugál)
Română (román)
Русский (orosz)
Suomi (finn)
Svenska (svéd)
Türkçe (török)
Tiếng Việt (vietnámi)
Українська (ukrán)
Fordítási probléma jelentése
A rip off example would be The Great Giana Sisters, everything is literally the same as Super Mario Bros, it's a copy paste, and a little pizazz just to say it's a different game.
True
In the context that you're describing, e.g. "rip off as a bootleg" then there is no difference. It's the same term used interchangeably (although, not clearly) to describe a cloned game.
Sidenote, a game can be a clone or a "-like" without being bad.
A Ripoff is a swindle; a bad deal. Whether it's illegal or not. A good example would be Aliens: Colonial Marines, which was sold using faked "actual game footage" and drummed up enormous pre-order interest on false pretenses.
Another kind of Ripoff is the DLC Trap. A game that's only truly playable with all the DLC... ...which adds up to many times the original cost of the game. Paradox Interactive are absolutely infamous for this. Some of their earlier games have $300 or more worth of DLC, and you'll need most of that to play the game and succeed. Even offline.
They're actually quite different. Historically a knockoff is a fake, an inferior copy. While a rip-off is a scam or a bad deal.
China's industry of building unlicenced copies from stolen blueprints is an example of a knockoff, while a hotel offering five nights for the price of seven is a classic holiday-town ripoff.
In that context that OP is using it, it's the same thing.