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originally posted in: Get a job... Happy Easter, kids.
Edited by Dog_Of_War_1138: 4/14/2017 7:34:11 AM
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I explained why his analogy is not apt in the previous comment. Repeated here for your convenience. [quote]I'm not prepared to drop $35K in your lap for a product, sight unseen. I am, however, prepared to drop $20 to reserve 2 copies of the Limited Edition disc, and pay the rest when I pick them up. Your analogy is not apt. The risk/reward equation is substantially different in those two cases. It's the difference between buying a $2 lottery ticket and betting $1000 on a hand of poker. I'll buy a lottery ticket from time to time, but unless I have a royal flush (in spades) I'm not risking the money on the card game.[/quote] There's no such thing as a "supposed" logical fallacy; logic is LOGIC or else it is a fallacy. Making a deliberately absurd comparison, such as comparing purchasing a $35,000 car sight unseen to ordering a $60 video game, is such a fallacy. OBVIOUSLY I would not buy a car sight unseen, but it doesn't logically follow that I wouldn't make a substantially lesser purchase on a pre-order; yet the fallacious "logic" assumes that if one would not blindly purchase a car, one shouldn't pre-order a video game either. The comparison does not stand up. And in case you missed it? Jayne of Canton called HIMSELF out for using this Reductio ad Absurdem; so, you're saying he is "pathetic" for having actually named his own logical fallacy, or what?
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  • The hate flows strongly through you. Just because YOU didn't understand the valid argument form, Reductio Ad Absurdem, which you have obviously confused as a straw man, does nothing to invalidate its validity. You have not presented any evidence to refute my argument therefore you need no response other than dismissal.

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  • Actually, you made an appeal to extremes, not a Reductio Ad Absurdum. You assumed that if someone were willing to spend $60 on a game, they would also be willing to spend $35K on a car. While absurd, this was not a proper Reductio argument. Do whatever you want with your money. But don't criticize the choices of others, or imagine that you're so much wiser than them. You think that Bungie made so many mistakes in Destiny that you need to reserve judgement before committing to buy the sequel- fine. Your choice. Others enjoyed the game just fine and based on that experience, expect D2 to be the same if not better. That's our choice. Thing is, most threads here (except this one) are of the nature "You're idiots if you preorder!" Nobody is going around criticizing people who DON'T preorder, except inasmuch as y'all keep blaming us for the death of the game industry and we keep saying "It wasn't us!" I think that's basically what the OP is saying; we're spending our own money, not yours, and it's nobody else's business.

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  • It's valid. It fits the very definition of the logical form. The op posited fallaciously that those who don't preorder are either children, poor or stupid. He needed to be informed otherwise and judging by the number of likes, I'm not the only one opposed to pre-orders. I respect your position and agree 100% percent that you can spend your money how you see fit. However you won't convince me that giving a company an indication that your going to purchase their product when they have released no substantial details on the product is a good idea. I think it makes for lazy companies. Yes you can cancel your preorder but statistically speaking, once people have made a purchasing decision, they nearly always proceed even when having second thoughts. I just don't think it's wise to give that kind of power to a company for an unreleased product.

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