For the last month, this forum has been full of so called Hardcore players whining about every little detail of the game. It's like having Christmas with little kids. (Anyone with kids or siblings knows what I mean).
Once the tree goes up, it's day after day of crying "can we open presents", or "I want my stuff now", and "when can I open them?" This goes on for days/weeks till Christmas comes. They finally open their gifts, and what happens? They start whining and crying about what they DIDN'T GET instead of the cool things they did.
"I wanted a 3DS, not a plain DS". "Why didn't I get the (?) I asked for?" "You suck, you never get me what I want".
So after all their stuff, they are ungrateful little sh*ts whining & crying they didn't get enough, didn't get what they wanted when they wanted it, didnt get it on their timetable, etc.
Guess what Boys & Girls, that's called LIFE!!!!
They removed what you liked about D1 from D2? Fine, go be a game designer and make the game you want. Or go back to D1 till all the DLC, Updates, etc come out.
Crucible is no fun cause of team shooting? Well it's a TEAM game. Get over it or go play something that you can be the Superstar at.
Try COD or Battlefield.
Oh, they didn't tell the whole story? Where is Eros, Eva Lavante, etc? Tell me one book, ,T.V. show, or movie that's going to have more content released that tells you the whole story & what happens in Chapter 1.
We have become a society of instant gratification, and nothing ever happens fast enough. What ever happened to the anticipation of waiting? Or the mystery? Sure, sometimes your disappointed, but just as much, things are so much better for the wait.
D1 is/was a great game, but honestly, it took 3 years to get where it is, and there is still stuff wrong with it. So either quit, and play something else, or enjoy what you have in anticipation of DLCs to come.
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Edited by dance4carrot: 10/8/2017 10:56:50 AMI like to make my kid buy his own Christmas presents. He got the Lego millennium falcon a few years ago. What we do is give him ten minutes to try and build it, when he fails, we dismantle it and put it back in the box so he can try again. If he ever completes it, we are going to reward him with a lovely beige sweater that the wife knitted.