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They wouldn’t be increasing the free currency payouts or giving players greater means to pick out their own Star Cards for free.Ĭonsumers forcing change is a great thing. If the developers at EA DICE really thought they were being treated unfairly by the public, if they felt like the game’s progression was appropriately separated from loot crates, they’d be digging in against that. The company’s executives may make statements that sound unhelpful, if not uncaring, when it talks to investors about this mess, but deeds count more than words. The developers of both games have made changes in reply, and both studios promise more are on the way. Both games were cuffed around in reviews for their opaque progression systems and the grind associated with leveling up. Need For Speed Payback also advances a player’s vehicle attributes through a similar system. That is a system where advancement is dependent upon loot crates - with some lesser options that do allow players to create or earn specific bonuses on their own.
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UFC 3 may not have earned this anger fairly, but its existence highlights what everyone is actually angry about: How EA screwed up the launch economy of Battlefront 2. When you’re mad at the wrong thing for the right reasons The anger of the UFC 3 community feels contextual rather than factual when you look at what creates noise, and the level of the rumble. That game’s microtransaction-based progression permeates its M圜areer suite - which includes the single-player career - and throws all players into the same pool in their cooperative/competitive multiplayer. If you want to see what a real pay-to-win scheme looks like in a sports video game, visit NBA 2K 18’s playground. Don’t spend money, and you’ll still be matched against those who have developed a similar stable of fighters through fair work. Even if you spend $100 on virtual currency to build a highly-rated fighter, you’ll simply be placed against others of the same rating. The matchmaking system puts the lie to pay-to-win accusations against UFC 3 Ultimate Team, too. And if it wasn’t an outrageous pay-to-win scheme when that game launched in 2016, why is it now? Yet this can’t be blamed on mixed messaging or the showcase given to a mode in a beta test.Īnyone who played UFC 2 would have known this is nothing new. The limited nature of the beta does make Ultimate Team more prominent in the menu and an elaborate onboarding for that mode gives it considerable emphasis, too. They’re not some optional thing there loot boxes are inaccessible to those modes.ĮA began UFC 3’s open beta on Friday (the game launches in February), and not all of its modes are available - such as the career, which is a substantial chunk of the mixed martial arts fantasy the game offers. Progression in the single-player career or in standard multiplayer of UFC 3 has nothing to do with Ultimate Team or loot boxes. Yes, they can buy that currency with real money instead.īut for Ultimate Team, at least, it’s an entirely separate mode within the game. Yes, players earn free currency to open those card packs. Ultimate Team and its imitators are predicated on acquiring packs of virtual items, given sports’ natural association with trading cards and other collectibles. You might even say this is the beginning of loot crates, at least on consoles.
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Ultimate Team modes, or some variant using microtransactions, have been in just about every licensed sports video game except motorsports since EA Sports came up with the concept about a decade ago. That’s understandable, but as applied to UFC 3, it comes out as false anger, if not worse. The longer answer is: This was an outrage because people are still pissed off about Star Wars Battlefront 2 and therefore still mistrustful of Electronic Arts and its motives whenever the word microtransaction is used. That was the only thought I could form as I watched the fury build up in the usual quarters and then spill over into such a mainstream controversy that it warranted a clarification from EA Sports what this was all about. The people who got in such a lather over microtransactions in EA Sports UFC 3 last week and over the weekend must not play Ultimate Team, or even sports video games.