Corrodias
Generally Awesome
I'd be curious to pick the brain of one of these "media executives" and get an honest answer (not PR doublespeak) about what evidence they have that it does any good. Surely a successful business is data-driven, right? Then again, seeing the likes of EA closing studios for decades, maybe they do not really qualify. And I doubt these people are particularly good at introspection, so they don't know themselves half as well as they should. They probably don't *know* honest answers.
The thing is, there can BE no data. You can't control for all the variables when comparing sales of two, different games. I think they're drinking Denuvo's kool-aid - and every system that has come before it - because it feels good, even if it costs them both money and consumer goodwill. Clearly you can run a business with 0 goodwill - I bring up EA again - but while I believe you can run it even better *with* goodwill - CDPR stands as an example - there's also no way to quantify that any more than there is to quantify how much you gain or lose by licensing DRM schemes.
So in the end it's cotton candy on one side and meringue on the other, no solid answers to be found in either one. Since the executives lack empathy, they choose the option that makes them feel more powerful rather than the one that makes customers care about them, because the former gives them an immediate high, and the latter makes them feel nothing, and they see no inherent value in it.
The thing is, there can BE no data. You can't control for all the variables when comparing sales of two, different games. I think they're drinking Denuvo's kool-aid - and every system that has come before it - because it feels good, even if it costs them both money and consumer goodwill. Clearly you can run a business with 0 goodwill - I bring up EA again - but while I believe you can run it even better *with* goodwill - CDPR stands as an example - there's also no way to quantify that any more than there is to quantify how much you gain or lose by licensing DRM schemes.
So in the end it's cotton candy on one side and meringue on the other, no solid answers to be found in either one. Since the executives lack empathy, they choose the option that makes them feel more powerful rather than the one that makes customers care about them, because the former gives them an immediate high, and the latter makes them feel nothing, and they see no inherent value in it.