- STARCRAFT 2 CAMPAIGN COLLECTION SALE FOR FREE
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- STARCRAFT 2 CAMPAIGN COLLECTION SALE FREE
Sure, Blizzard is clearly profitable, but you have to honestly wonder how much of that is really Starcraft 2 instead of say, Hearthstone's insane greed.This is a momentous week in gaming because one of its biggest franchises is celebrating a milestone birthday.
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You don't even need to spend any money on Starcraft 2 to play the co-op mode, and basic ongoing support like new maps (which again, have new art, voice acting, etc.) is free too. Compare the effort in creating $5 co-op Alarak - a new 'hero' and an entire army to back him up, along with structures for his base - with his inclusion as a single character for $7.50 in Heroes of the Storm.Īnd it's useful to note the mode itself is free for everybody. You get big voice actors, multiple new units (which means new models, new textures, new special effects, new animations, new sounds), new structures (ditto), and lots of more subtle but still expensive development tasks like balancing and game design. We'll never know for certain, but I find it very hard to believe that Blizzard is making huge money on these cheap new RTS armies.
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$5 for a new RTS army (which you can demo for free first) would have been considered extremely generous in basically any era of gaming. That's basically what I'm disagreeing with. It's admittedly somewhat inference on my part, but I feel your "these days" wording somehow suggests things are greedier than they used to be.
(To be fair Blizzard have some tricks to make it more profitable, like selling announcers separately or some of the new unit models as skins for conventional multiplayer, but that doesn't negate my larger point that is a very fair deal.)
(And that's technically more expensive than this by a couple bucks because of inflation.) This isn't the sort of insane profit grab you're suggesting.Īnd to Blizzard's credit you can technically play any of these co-op armies for free, though the free versions level cap out fairly early. If you had suggested back in 1998 that we could buy new armies for Starcraft for $5 each you'd probably have been called a naive dreamer. You might have gotten this kind of thing before in $30 expansion packs (though I should note not from Blizzard), but the price here is extremely low for the amount of content you're getting. For your $5 you're essentially getting a new army for co-op, complete with new unit s, game mechanics, and voice-overs. I don't know, I feel like we never really saw post-release extended content like this previously. I actually ripped on the story of HotS for a long time, but after that final mission, I went back and played it again, and it felt a lot better. As soon as that final mission plays out, everything makes sense. Up to that point, it felt really weirdly forced. after I finished the epilogue missions of LotV. The expansion of the universe and the lore gets insane as the games go along, which did feel a bit odd, but again, ended up working for me. His character and motivations are completely different, but in a way that ends up working, just not in a way that it worked before.
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WoL opens with him drunk and depressed in a bar, with a full head of hair, gazing sadly at a picture of Kerrigan. To give you an example, Raynor in the first game was, well, bald, but he was commanding, he took no shit from anyone, and his anger at Mengsk for abandoning Kerrigan was more about his sense of loyalty being violated than his heart being ripped out. It's different in tone and in scope, but stands up on its own.
I was really thrown off with how different it was, but once I settled into it, I liked it for what it is. The secret mission at the end of the Zerg campaign in Brood War is what basically the entirety of SC2 is based around. Submit a new deal Submit a question/PSA Reddit New Deals Popular Deals Deals and Discussion