News - I Will Buy Warzone 2i Because I'm Stupid And Part Of The Problem

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Call of Duty is a good article game to buy if you can only buy one each year. You're going to get a campaign, you're going to get zombies, you get War Zone, but that's free, so it doesn't count, and you get the multiplayer. That's a lot of content ever since they transitioned into the games as a service model you're also going to get seasonal drops, with a battle pass to grind, to get new weapons and experiment more with what you like doing which is simply leveling up watch numbers go up then watch new things unlock then play around with new things for your gun and you're going to get all of that for free by the way when I'm feeling sad and I don't know what to do and I don't want to be worried about all of the problems that exist in my life I play Call of Duty, it's one of my favorite things in life it is just such a slot machine turned into a multiplayer game that it immediately blocks off any negative things that I'm experiencing.

I'm just like in a trance playing it, and this is why people play it, which is the same reason. That skill-based matchmaking is such an important conversation in the Call of Duty community, and one that I still don't understand a lot of the very dramatic reactions that I've talked about in the content creation space.

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Keep saying that, sbmm, it should be removed from Call of Duty and that it should go back to the way it was on the Xbox 360 when gaming was a lot smaller. And multiplayer was definitely not something that so many people played and definitely not something that people had built entire careers on, and that you have so many people trying to build careers on when you don't have 177, 000.

Guides and people that have nothing better to do but stream Call of Duty on Twitch to two viewers, and they're both themselves if Call of Duty had no skill-based matchmaking. A large majority of the player base would stop playing a lot faster, including me. Because you're going to be jumping into matches where you're going to be destroyed.

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Do you know what it is for most people including myself cuz this is how I play Call of Duty having a long day at the office you're tired you're working your 9 to 5, you take care of a series of extra responsibilities you get a call from your boss you send a couple extra emails and you're like well I just want to unwind a little bit before dinner and going to bed I'm going to hop into Call of Duty Modern Warfare 3, and the first thing is that you jump into a Lobby and immediately get 360 no scoped by Timmy and Timmy is so far above the skill level of your lobby that he's about to drop a nuke and while he's dropping the nuke he's also dropping the teabag right after you every single time he kills you, with a knife that's not a good feeling I wouldn't go back to play that game cuz Call of Duty I don't think it's really that addictive.

I just think it's therapeutic in a way; it's like a great distraction. But it doesn't have elements that make you unable to stop playing; you can stop playing Call of Duty. I really think it's difficult for Call of Duty to ever break too far away from where it is while it has success, but stopping its success is not going to happen through some grassroots movement.

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Everybody says no; we need to stop buying Call of Duty. Success is going to stop when the game is just so bad it gets so stale that people stop playing it, people stop buying it, people lose faith and trust in the franchise, and in the next iteration of it, when we reach that point. The market will regulate itself.

People will stop buying Call of Duty if they play it and it stinks, but for now, they're keeping it more or less in line. There's going to be a slight decline at some point in the game, maybe, but for now it's fine. I also do want to talk when it comes to the development of the game about microtransactions, as a lot of people say.

It's bad because it's a $70 game with microtransactions. I'm going to refer back in this article to when I said that you get multiplayer, campaigns, and zombies for $70, and you get season passes, which, as long as you're playing, are completely free to use the premium version of them. They put out a ton of content, and the only things that affect the game play are completely free.

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All they are charging for are some of the stupidest microtransactions and costumes in the gaming space. You could complain that they are keeping all of these costumes locked away for money in a game that already costs you money. You could say you accept it if it were free to play; you would pay for costumes, but no, that's not true.

Either you like spending money on costumes or you don't. These are some of the dumbest and most useless microtransactions. In gaming, people buy them because they just really want a costume that turns out to be a ton of fun and has microtransactions, be they free to play or pay to play, but they don't offer you free content that's actually good, all year round, on top of a product that you have to be insane to think that Call of Duty does not provide excellent value for money.

As a article game, as a day-one purchase, if you are interested in Call of Duty, you get a ton of bang for your buck, and nobody ever tells you to spend more money. This is coming from somebody who hates microtransactions and frequently complains about them, but I'm going to be honest, I don't really find any problem with the ones in Call of Duty.

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Because I have always spent $70 and absolutely nothing else on the yearly Call of Duty and gotten a completely full experience.

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MW3 is right around the corner and I need to get some things off my chest about the negativity in the community, the complaints on movement, sbmm, microstransactions, and the absolutely toxic culture that surrounds everything Call of Duty.
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