I feel like all of the recent updates had this lackluster appeal to them. It might be because I’m outgrown it, but the last big update I felt excited for was the terrain generation one (I think 1.18?). Other than that I can’t really get behind any of them. I mean, archeology sounds cool and all but it doesn’t really feel like Minecraft. Also, while having more mobs is cool, it just doesn’t matter as much to me anymore. They keep pushing out these updates and it feels less and less like Minecraft.

nb4 “just play an older version” yeah no duh, I know that’s an option. That’s not what I’m complaining about.

  • Dudewitbow@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    you can find that with any genre. the point is, you shouldn’t expect much out of a games update over a decade later. If it happens, great, but its far the outlier for games to get updates. The update is a bonus, and when you buy a game, it should be about what content is already out, not what content might be out because its never guaranteed.

    • Pyro@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Buying something based on what it currently is (and not what they promise to add) is a great way of thinking.

      However, implying the more a game costs the more value it brings is very naïve. Are you telling me the latest Call of Duty has more value than Baldur’s Gate 3 because it’s a bit more expensive?

      • Dudewitbow@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        it’s not about value, but moreso if a game cost less, more often than not, don’t expect more content out of it. its not a guarantee as there are outliers, but purely by fundamental income, one will get content more than the others.

        the simple comparison is compare games that have subscription costs vs ones that dont, this is especially true for MMOs and see how often they update. It’s part of the reason why devs are pushing towards the (unsustainable) battle pass model. the battlepass is a way to prolong user engagement while forces the dev to push out updates more often than not. An example of a game being paid then switching to the battlepass model was Overwatch.

        How many heroes were released in the base game/year time ratio vs what happened with 2. 1 was overall a better game, but 2 clearly pushed out more content in a faster time window than 1 did.

        Games like BG3, and Terraria are some of the exceptions to that rule where it was content foward or decided to update several times without having paid updates. they are by far the norm. Hell Larians publically said they werent doing paid udpates, they are clearly far from the normal.