View Full Version : Newegg reviews of SH 5
simsurfer
03-09-10, 12:21 PM
Ouch!!
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16832138078
Biscuit
03-09-10, 01:09 PM
Well there is only one review .
SteamWake
03-09-10, 01:18 PM
Its a single 'user' review. :doh:
If you really wanna see something check out the Amazon reviews :up:
FIREWALL
03-09-10, 01:23 PM
Ouch!!
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16832138078
After reading last review I called my local BestBuy where I bought SH5.
Asst. Manger said they got a memo to refund for SH5 "No questions asked"
Interesting huh ?
Yes ouch, not a good sign.
While I had my initial difficulties even getting SH5 to play, with a couple mods things are looking up now!
Iron Budokan
03-09-10, 02:09 PM
If you really wanna see something check out the Amazon reviews :up:
Yeah, no kidding. They are absolutely shredding that game. No mercy whatsoever.
Iron Budokan
03-09-10, 02:12 PM
After reading last review I called my local BestBuy where I bought SH5.
Asst. Manger said they got a memo to refund for SH5 "No questions asked"
Interesting huh ?
Wow. They must be getting a lot of angry customer calls to have made that decision.
I think this is even worse news for the game than all the other stuff that's gone on in the past week. :hmmm:
DiverDan
03-09-10, 02:13 PM
After reading last review I called my local BestBuy where I bought SH5.
Asst. Manger said they got a memo to refund for SH5 "No questions asked"
Interesting huh ?
GameStop told me the same thing when I returned mine.
Iron Budokan
03-09-10, 02:21 PM
This is it, guys. This is the death knell. Game shops taking back an opened PC game with no questions asked.
I'm just...I'm speechless.
This does not bode well for Ubi on any imaginable level.
Yep, if this is corporate/franchise wide (Bestbuy and Gamestop) and not just something local, it represents a major departure from policy, and UBIsoft will certainly feel this directly.
As has been said by others here... I do feel bad for those who have purchased the (right to play the) game and can't, but at the same time I must admit that I am rooting for the failure of this kind of DRM and cheering every new development toward that end.
Please note that this does not mean I am anti-DRM in principle. I am 100% behind the defense of legitimate rights and property. What UBI doesn't seem to realize (or want to realize) is that this DRM scheme is impinging on their customer's legitimate rights and property. The fact that it doesn't even serve it's intended purpose while doing so makes it all the more egregious.
I hope most can understand this point of view even if they don't necessarily agree with it.
JD
At this point we can only speculate how the new DRM scheme (and of course also the release quality) will affect the sales here. Somewhere someone posted a reference to Steam (I can't find the thread quickly), where Silent Hunter V and Assassins Creed II seem to be doing fine relative to other titles. Although I was surprised that Operation Flashpoint 2 Dragon Rising rerelease did better.
On Newegg, or amazon.com/.de/.uk the titles don't seem to be doing so well judging from the sales rank, and the consumer reviews. However, there are several versions of the releases, and you'd have to average them to get a more representative picture. Finally, all those relative sales ranks don't tell you about the total volume of sales, which is the meaningful property (and allows to estimate the all-important revenue). Finally, those are only a few sales channels, and I don't know how much percentage of sales Ubisoft makes through only those 3 channels.
So I guess we will have to wait a couple of weeks for Ubisofts official quaterly report, or the official information for their stock holders. Judging from the price development of SHV in several European Online stores established from price search engines (somewhat credible I guess), SHV price dropped from an average of ca 46 Eur to meanwhile 39 Eur within a week, steadily. On Amazon it appears to be similar. Maybe that is a market indicator for the customer reception of their OSP ideas.
The future will be exciting for sure, waiting for the effect on Ubis sales. I still hope that was Ubi's last voyage to intrusive DRM worlds (or resale limitation, etc), and that other companies will learn from it without repeating the experiment.
Icarus1
03-09-10, 03:07 PM
I had the slideshow and 39 minute load times (nVidia CC had AA on in a profile). Removed the profile and no slide show even on highest settings.
DRM/install was a total headache and I felt like I was jumping through hoops,and they just kept coming. Manual is a joke and no keymap. That is inexcusable.
Once the install nightmare was over and slideshow fixed, I like it.
This is it, guys. This is the death knell. Game shops taking back an opened PC game with no questions asked.
I'm just...I'm speechless.
This does not bode well for Ubi on any imaginable level.
The Amazon forums are ripping it, too. The sales rank has dropped to #500+
Ubi's announcement they were infecting SHV with DRM was the first step toward what probably is the most disastrous launch in publishing history.
Who has ever heard that peeing on one's customers is good for business?:hmmm:
Nick Holden
03-09-10, 04:45 PM
Who has ever heard that peeing on one's customers is good for business?:hmmm:
That depends on your type of business. :o
It has been a very problematic start for this game. Core customer pushback (DRM, game design and bugs...) and bad reviews by gamers are not things of which success is made.
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