Duuk, look at Civ4; it still has strong sales figures, even this far after release. If you make a good game, and support it there is plenty of monetary incentive. Your argument is just a justification for pure greed, it's what's wrong with this country.
No, it is a justification for making more money.
There are reasons to make more money that are not pure greed.
It's also ironic you tote a mod in your sig that would be impossible to implement and use like it is done currently in Civ4 if we end up with locked assets caused by DLC.
And if the DLC somehow causes global thermonuclear war, then the cute kitten will die.
Locked assets != DLC. Given how modular Civ4 is, and how much more modular it got as they revised how it worked, you seem to have some kind of fear that they will make modding in Civ5 somehow far worse?
It is my opinion that withholding content for the expressed purpose of bilking potential customers on release day is shallow.
How dare they develop more than one product at a time! Fie on them?
I mean, when a game studio releases two games, how dare they not sell them for one price! The second game was mostly finished -- why didn't they ship it (or what was done) with the first? Fie on them!
That's my opinion, it's not whining to say so.
It is your opinion that it is not whining to say so.
What is shallow and pathetic is attempting to label your opposition with purely emotional connotations, without logical argument, as you attempt to do so.
Calling someone shallow and pathetic is not labeling someone with purely emotional connotations? I'm trying to keep score.
Well I suppose there is an argument in your above post, but it amounts to "They made it, they can do what they want." Sure, but it's my money, and I can do what I want as well.
Yes. You have a choice -- you can buy the version of civ with 18 civilizations, or burn an extra 10$ and get a 19th civ and some making-off fluff. In both cases, you don't get access to all of the work that every developer at the studio ever did.
And I refuse to celebrate greed just for the sake of celebrating greed; this attitude which has permeated American Society since Reagan's Revolution is why we are where we are today.
I think you have larger issues than Civ5 having an optional 19th civ.
It is really simple: if they can project greater revenue, they can justify hiring more development resources. If the Deluxe edition means greater revenue, then paying for development resources to produce the Deluxe edition makes sense.
They are aiming for people who are
price insensitive about the price of a computer game, and giving them a less efficient (in dollars per gameplay) version of the game in exchange for extra money. This allows for more revenue, and quite honestly allows them to spend more money on the game they ship for the price sensitive people.
Now, there is a form of jealousy here -- players who are price sensitive can be jealous of those who are not.