TL;DR:

  • They apologized (again)

  • They will refund everyone who bought the beach DLC and make it a free addition to the game, admitting it was tasteless that they made paid DLC when the game is in a broken state

  • They will focus on base changes and better modding tools before starting to make more DLC (previously announced DLC has been delayed to 2025)

  • Console release delayed

Honestly, this is a good update. It’s everything we wanted to hear. Looking forward to buying the game when it gets fixed.

  • @Ashtear
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    327 days ago

    Paradox is extremely healthy.

    If we’re both going to be speculating here, I’m going with the more likely consideration for a publisher with record performance. In early August, they saw an early access game get its full release in an unfinished state to massive acclaim and sales (along with similar, larger trends) and decided to test their market with the same.

    I don’t even have a dog in this fight; I’m not a city management sim fan. I’m just calling it like it is.

    • @ampersandrew@lemmy.world
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      027 days ago

      And perhaps that health is because by that point they already started releasing multiple games far too early for a cash injection, one of which ended with them cutting Harebrained Schemes loose. I’m also calling it like it is. I don’t see healthy companies sacrifice their long term fan base and development throughput for short term gains. It smells a whole lot like trying to stop the bleeding. As for assigning The Chinese Room to sequel a beloved RPG, I don’t even know where to start there.

      • Cosmic Cleric
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        027 days ago

        I don’t see healthy companies sacrifice their long term fan base and development throughput for short term gains.

        New to Capitalism?

          • Cosmic Cleric
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            27 days ago

            I don’t see healthy companies sacrifice their long term fan base and development throughput for short term gains.

            New to Capitalism?

            No, hence my conclusions.

            You’ve never seen a corporation sacrifice its long-term health to report short-term profits, to meet an upcoming quarterly report?

            Ever?

              • Cosmic Cleric
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                27 days ago

                I don’t see healthy companies sacrifice their long term fan base and development throughput for short term gains.

                New to Capitalism?

                No, hence my conclusions.

                You’ve never seen a corporation sacrifice its long-term health to report short-term profits, to meet an upcoming quarterly report?

                Ever?

                I’ve never seen one I would call healthy.

                Well, most people believe that all publicly traded corporations, healthy or otherwise, only focus on their next quarterly report profits, and that long-term strategy and growth goals are rarely if ever considered.

                Granted, I’d much rather live in your world than mine, but I don’t think you’re correct on this one.

                • @ampersandrew@lemmy.world
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                  127 days ago

                  You don’t see Take Two shoving GTA6 and Judas out the door for profits now, for instance. Paradox abiding by the same MO to burn good will for multiple games and then getting developers off their books is a move you make when you’re out of better options.

                  • Cosmic Cleric
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                    027 days ago

                    You don’t see Take Two shoving GTA6 and Judas out the door for profits now, for instance.

                    And all the other corporations out there?

                    Remember your stance was that all healthy corporations would never sacrifice long-term health for short-term profits.

                    Paradox abiding by the same MO to burn good will for multiple games and then getting developers off their books is a move you make when you’re out of better options.

                    You’re not really addressing my point, but instead skirting around it…

                    Well, most people believe that all publicly traded corporations, healthy or otherwise, only focus on their next quarterly report profits, and that long-term strategy and growth goals are rarely if ever considered.

                    Our original disagreement was on if a healthy corporation would focus on the quarterly profits over long-term goals in the same way that an unhealthy corporation would. Your stance was that any healthy corporation would not.