Skip Navigation

Apex Legends’ Final Fantasy VII Crossover Prompts Fan Outcry. Players of the battle royale shooter are baffled by the $300+ price for the cosmetics

kotaku.com Apex Legends’ Final Fantasy VII Crossover Prompts Fan Outcry

Players of the battle royale shooter are baffled by the $300+ price for the cosmetics

Apex Legends’ Final Fantasy VII Crossover Prompts Fan Outcry
59

You're viewing part of a thread.

Show Context
59 comments
  • I am just so tired of dealing with your entire worldview.

    We can't ban unethical business practices because that's dictating customers' morality, somehow.

    Oh but it's not unethical because manipulating people is good actually.

    Oh but it's not manipulation if it works.

    Don't I know that consumer protection laws are like banning drugs? Which you're okay with if they're the wrong drugs?

    I just do not give a shit what you want, anymore. Your principles are slippery and their justifications are ahistorical and it all leads to conclusions that should make you reconsider. I'm not convinced you know what cognitive dissonance feels like.

    This entire business model is horrible in a way you ardently defend, whilst insisting you're not defending it. You have grand-sounding reasons for encouraging everything short of already-criminal fraud. You keep saying you're not encouraging it, but quite frankly, come the fuck on. All you've had to say against it is the wishy-washiest nitpicking at the boundaries of this metastasizing industry-wide problem that didn't exist a decade ago. And you seem serenely unbothered by how often your unprompted legislative suggestions do not square with the alleged rationale for otherwise naysaying the only solution that would actually work.

    I do not intended to give you further attention on this subject. Quite frankly 'absolute freedom to manufacture consent' is where I should've pulled the chute, and it'll be my point of reference next time someone asks why I don't give a shit about libertarian arguments for this blatant exploitation.

    • manipulating people is good somehow

      You really like twisting my words...

      I said manipulating people (as in, advertising a product using research about efficacy) is covered under free speech. That doesn't make it good, it just makes it protected. That right ends when you defraud someone though, because that's a contractual violation.

      Which you're okay with if they're the wrong drugs?

      No, the only drugs that should be banned are those that present a significant risk to others. Something like Fentanyl has an incredibly high risk to the public because even a small amount can cause serious side effects, whereas something like marijuana has pretty much no risk.

      There's a spectrum here, and the standard should be risk to the public, not whatever nonsense the DEA has come up with.

      That also goes for business practices. If it's consensual, it should probably be allowed, even if it's predatory in nature (e.g. gambling). If it's coercive (e.g. ransomware attacks), it should be banned and prosecuted. There's a pretty clear distinction there.

      This entire business model is horrible

      I absolutely agree. I just disagree about it needing to be banned. I'm also disgusted with the tobacco industry (and they've done some truly predatory advertising in the past before the crackdowns), but I'll defend everyone's right to buy cigarettes.

      metastasizing industry-wide problem that didn't exist a decade ago

      This type of business practice is very old. Yeah, video game MTX are new, but selling FOMO isn't. In the past it was subscriptions to all kinds of things, collectibles, "as seen on TV" nonsense, etc.

      The main shift is moving that to digital products and reducing the barrier to payment, but the business model itself is quite old. Basically the pattern is:

      1. Create mediocre product with catchy name
      2. Hire charismatic businessman to create a feeling of need
      3. Introduce a "limited time" to the offer

      That's basically a MTX, just with a physical product instead of digital.

      I do not intended to give you further attention on this subject

      Then thanks for the discussion, and I hope you have a fantastic day. But if you want to continue, I'll probably respond.

You've viewed 59 comments.