SupremacyKing
Prince
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2014
- Messages
- 564
pre-order complete. 

As a person into Real Science, the idea of an Exoplanets Map Pack inspires me, so for me it is a unique and inspiring offer.
I think pre-ordering is entirely valid given there's a pre-order bonus (the 'Exoplanets' map pack), and presumably you'll be able to pre-load the game. But only if you're certain you're going to be buying the game at full price anyway. And even then, pre-ordering this early is hardly necessary; you can wait for reviews in the week prior to release.
This might be true of smaller developers, but I highly doubt this is a realistic consideration for a 2K title.
I think tbh it's a safe bet to pre-order. With it being just a skin in my opinion most of the technical work has been done for years.
The same logic could have been applied to R2 - after all, every TW game is fundamentally just a reskinned version of the last one with minor changes. CA still screwed it up. Of course, CA has had bad releases before - Empire was in a poor state at release too.
Then again, of course, exactly the same has been said of a number of Civ games, including both Civ IV and Civ V.
There's been a notable decline in the quality of Total War games. Rome, even if it wasn't buggy as all hell, it still missing plenty of features present in the previous Rome.
I don't know. It just seems like in the case of Total War, their solution to declining quality is to throw more polygons at a model until sales improve.
This game taught me not to preorder
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The argument goes that by waiting until it is all released and patched up, you can get a better quality version of the game at a price cheaper than launch,
Which is erroneous. If you can get the game cheaper than at launch, certainly go for it - but then that same consideration applies to getting the game at any point post-launch before it's first on sale; whether you pre-order it or get it two days after release makes no difference, and usually games offer a small discount for pre-orders which makes them cheaper than they would be for some months afterwards (Rome 2 did this, for example).
As for waiting until it's patched up, again this applies to day of release and later, but beyond that it makes the false (and frankly bizarre) assumption that somehow, if you preorder the game, you won't benefit from the same patches as everyone else. Anyone who preordered Rome 2, for example, is playing the same game today for no greater financial outlay than someone who bought it yesterday, since the game's base price now is no lower than it was at release.
Of course, if the game is bugged at release the player may be put off trying it again post-patches, but that's their choice and again has nothing to do with preordering.