Some highlights:
But they probably definitely will be ready to launch on December 10th – or at least that’s what he says in response to an investor asking if the studio can really be comfortable saying it’s going to actually come out on the 10th: “That’s more or less what I’m saying, I guess – yes.”
Later in the transcript it gets really bad, with some incredibly poor comments about crunch, and some hilarious pretzeling over whether or not there is actually a “problem” with current-gen builds. But several of the investor questions boil down to “but m8, is it definitely coming out in December? Because you’ve said this before?”
Regarding crunch, which has deservedly been a bit of a PR nightmare for them of late, Kicińsk says that “actually, it’s not that bad – and never was”, which is a hell of a pull quote. Although he acknowledges that some people are “crunching heavily”, he says most of the team aren’t at all because they’ve finished their portion of development (were they crunching before? Who knows!). At this stage “it’s mostly about Q&A and engineers, programmers”, (which still sounds like a lot of people, if you ask me), and in any case the crunch is “not that heavy.” Those who are crunching will, y’know, have that crunch extended for the duration of the three week delay, but according to Kicińsk everyone is happy with the delay! So no worries! Pay no attention to the crunch behind the curtain!
This tone apparently did not go down well with staff: Bloomberg News reporter Jason Schreier tweeted that he has been passed an email sent to CDPR staff from Kicińsk apologising for his comments on crunch. “I had not wanted to comment on crunch,” quotes Schreier, apparently from this email, “yet I still did, and I did it in a demeaning and harmful way… What I said was not even unfortunate, it was utterly bad.”
Oh and the developers found out about the extra crunch the same time everyone else did.
Hear me out ----
CyberSpunk 2020
😬😬😬
It’s possible that CDPR have been a bit hoist on their own pet toad
wait, is this some malapropism like saying “bone apple tea” when you’re about to eat something on instagram?
What, can you get a pet frog in the game? (and not just the RPG, but this game)
In the article comments:
@SwampRat I’ve come screaming in to defend my honour here: not an accident. I routinely replace petard with pet toad because it’s the punchline to a joke with a really long set up from one episode of a 90s TV show. Basically a lot of the time I commit the cardinal sin of writing for an audience of one, that being myself…
Cross gen games in which the game has to be the same (execpt for graphics of course) across generations are always a disaster. Battlefield 4, need for speed rivals, and call of duty ghosts are perfect examples, all of them were a buggy mess
Oh lord what a snowstorm this will be when it gets delayed again and misses the holiday deadline. They’re really painting themselves into a corner with how often they keep lying to press and employees: if the Day 0 patch isn’t borderline perfect the g*mer rage will be a sight to behold. I wonder if its a decent way to start radicalizing libs over; pointing out where capitalism has forced things to be worse for both the employees and them as consumers
The entirety of video game development should be an easy channel to radicalise libs through, last time I tried with my friend I got the fabulous “Capitalism isnt that bad actually.” response. G#mers are some of the more notariously cultish examples of consumers out there.
Eh, “this luxury segment of entertainment industry would be better for its current middle class target audience under socialism” isn’t a take I nessary buy. Creative fields aren’t as easy to quantify as production of coal and socialist countries have a sad history of artists being screwed over by bureaucrats.
Creative fields aren’t as easy to quantify as production of coal and socialist countries
Have you actually asked the people in creative fields in capitalist countries that understand the two systems properly whether they think the creative fields are better in one rather than the other?
socialist countries have a sad history of artists being screwed over by bureaucrats.
Sure, but that’s not really a feature of socialism is it? Bureaucrats are certainly prone to meddle with art in capitalist countries - the plethora of countries that censor lgbt themes comes to mind.
You do bring up an interesting point about luxury or triple A games though. Under a progressed socialism where mega corporations are gone, I doubt many people will subject themselves to the hellish hours it takes to make a game like Red Dead 2, so games like that will be much rarer and take much longer to come out if they still do at all. On the other hand, passion projects and experimental works would become much more common since they wouldn’t need to be profitable (I’m no expert but I believe the art unions in the USSR were meant to foster this). While people idealize the relative creative freedom modern indie developers have to triple A developers, their output is still obviously dictated by the profit motive. There’s a reason so many indie games are roguelikes. They require a much shorter gameplay loop then most games, and they still sell.