CanuckSoldier
Emperor
I could see what your saying, all though I, personally have no problems with writing long reports (in fact, I used to play an online game where that was the majority of what i did. It was called tribalwars, pretty fun if you are a leader like I was perfecting your tribe) I could see how that could annoy people once they get a beta version of the game. I agree with you and although I have never tested a game myself I would assume that testing more for people who want to fix things then want to play the game early. Do they do anything to prevent people from just testing to play and not offering suggestions?, because I know I would be ticke if I was just giving out free copies of the my game.
Well the developers know that they can't expect a 40hr work week from free community testers and that some people join the test with the best of intentions and then real life comes along and derails them, such as the birth of a child or something. Which is why 2K and Firaxis have their own in house QA to insure that a minimum standard is maintained. Although in the past I would say that the free testers have contributed eminsely to both finding bugs and recommending gameplay changes that significantly improved the game for everyone. After all we are all huge fans of the series, were as the inhouse testers may have gaming backgrounds in other games, they are not likely TBS experts and are following a QA sheet that tells them what they have to test and evaluate.
But since you likely were invited to test because some other tester or former tester recommended you strongly, if it turns out that you didn't live upto those expectations, it's likely that friend of yours is not going to put you at the top of his/her list again. Reputations are important to many of us in the Civ community after all.
And yes I've even invited key members of the community in the past, people I thought had what it takes to learn to test a game. And found out that for some people it is not easy to switch from being a competitive gamer to being a QA tester, while some things are common there are many differences in the skill sets of these groups.
CS