And as we see in some of these responses, they feel like Epic caving in to their demands is the only right/sensible course of action. That Fortnite should be beholden to their desires. Unsurprisingly, I don't share this attitude. (2/x)
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For me, a big part of the appeal of Fortnite is, as I've often talked about, the way the world feels alive with possibility, a little chaotic, not just an environment that exists to give players what they want. (3/x)
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Does that mean I like everything that gets added to the game? No, I don't. But I LIKE that I don't like everything. I don't want it to feel safe, or predictable. And frankly it's odd to me that so many people seem to want the game to give them exactly what they want. (4/x)
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Sometimes, sometimes there's value in games giving us what we don't want. In confronting and adapting to that. I hope Fortnite keeps it up. (5/5)
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Aaaaand there it goes. This sucks. (6/5)https://twitter.com/polygon/status/1073654841593991169?s=21 …
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End of conversation
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I love how a game so large (and appealing to a giant swath of kids who clearly aren't on these boards, I hope) can have any group think there's something like a "literal universal response" to a thing they don't like.
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Even this is only scratching the surface of the real problem- namely, that Epic killed one of the greatest mobile games ever made, gave us Fortnite DLC as some kind of twisted consolation prize, and then wouldn't even let us keep that.
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