I can't help but feel like this is the same thing as going to a restaurant. Eating the whole meal. Then saying you don't want to pay for it after the fact when you totally could have either ordered something else or said from the beginning it wasn't what you expect it. I don't understand the entitlement of because i'm not happy i should get my way no matter what. Im saying this as a waiter that has to deal with this every now and then
Burn the heretic! :DWell since i dont think you understand that my point is that The Limit on hours played should be extended to 5 hours to decide if you like the game or want to return it. In some causes lowered if the game is only a few hours long but usually price coincides with that anyway.
So i dont see how your question is relative to my point?
To also point out technically the game can last years at its current state. If you can stomach endless grinding and only have an interest in the possible likelihood of some super unique species ETC...
Nor am i defending Hello Games or Sean Murray I think they owe more on the game, but i also except the fact that since i played the game for so long im not owed any refund. Plus, i don't have any buyers remorse. I still enjoy the game for what it is. I find it relaxing like minecraft is. Could it have been better sold, Yes. Could the price point be lower in the state its in now, Totally. The point still stands that you don't buy a book read the whole thing then say it wasn't your cup of tea gimme my money back.
If you only played 5 hours or less then sure i think steam should raise the time to 5 hours. Steam doesn't though and their limit is still 2 hours or 14 days.
If the resources are more than an abundant to make an informed purchase and you still buy it and then after that you are fully aware that you can return it with in a certain time. You can't really be upset at anyone but yourself is all im saying.
But joking aside, the point is that ppl feel entitled to a refund because the game is just not what they sold it to be, and ppl feel entitled after spending 5-15 hours on it because it takes that long to confirm that they were scammed. It's not just the usual entitlement issues that is so typical of the millennials and onward generations.
I for one, never believed a single word of the "this is gonna be all games in one, the last game you will ever need, above all". I never expected it to be that. I saw it was going to be a walking simulator with some basic grinding. But there is a difference between getting the game that is in the video on the game's steam page, and getting this piece of crap that is nowhere near it! It doesn't look anything like the "gameplay video". Even the list of features is total bs, and doesn't represent what you get in the slightest.
Yes, that does actually make everyone entitled to a refund, even by law in the more civilised parts of the world! And no, its not okay to say that "oh but you had eaten most of your cake so no refunds" when that cake was made of shit instead of chocolate. How can you expect them to not do this again and again if you just accept that you got scammed? Wouldn't you want your money back, if you found a half baked dead rat in the middle of your cake? By your standards, that would be perfectly fine and the guests fault, not the restaurants, since the guest ate half of the cake before getting to the dead rat inside, so he has entitlement issues and not a legit concern that he was sold a ratcake instead of the chocolate cake he ordered.
To go with another analogy, this is exactly like buying a brick in an iPhone box, with the dealer even showing you a real iPhone, but then switches up the phone for a brick without your knowledge. And even the brick is broken in half inside the box.
About the playtime thing, for a lot of us, we had to try to make the broken brick fit into the wall. I mean it took hours just to play with the settings, fix the damn game and make it work at all! 5 Hours would be a more realistic limit in the case of this game. I would likely extend that to 10-15 hours to get an actual feel for the game, and for the player to accept the fact that he won't find anything new and that it's a scam. With my 30 hours I'm not getting a refund, although I've "completed" about 5% of the game, I think. I barely visited 10-12 systems. One could also argue that I completed 95% of the game, because it's all the same all along, except for getting a bigger ship/inventory and getting to the center, which I'm no closer to. I only got my atlas pass v1! Would you say that I completed the game so I should not get a refund? My 30 hours says so, but my atlas pass and discovery list says the opposite, because with enough experience you can get your first pass in like one hours playtime. So for me it feels like I just completed the "demo" of the game, if there was one. And I didn't like it as much as I hoped for, and wouldn't buy it.
I can live with not getting my money back, but only because I kind of see it for what it is, a mediocre walking simulator with a lot of grinding. My brain sometimes needs this simplicity to let it rest and wander. I wouldn't mind getting some of my money back though, there are like 7656 other games exactly like this on steam early access for 5-15 bucks. That would have been an okay price.
My point is, I don't like it that ppl are just supposed to accept the fact that they have been scammed and just move on, when they could clearly do something about it, like ask for a refund even if the "policy" on steam shouldn't allow for one. And in this case it's not an "entitlement issue", it's a legit concern of being scammed, it's about standing up against future scams like this.