Wwen wrote:
Or you could not buy it. If people don't want to pay for a beta, they won't and then EA will stop offering the service. People are dumb and will pay for anything though. It doesn't really affect me or humanity.
That's a pretty ignorant view of economics.
If people are willing to do things you aren't willing to do, eventually it will affect you because things you are willing to pay for (shared interests with those same idiots) will rise in cost as well. For example:
These idiots pay for micro-transactions that EA offers will eventually lead to them thinking that ALL additional content needs to be charged, eventually probably including patches to their own broken games. Why? These patches won't only fix things, they'll claim it adds some new content of some kind, which warrants being charged. Eventually, rather than including the content up front in the game to begin with (which you're paying $60 for), they'll hold some content out just to charge for it later because these idiots will pay for it.
Micro-transactions are prime example of this principle leading to negative outcomes. In the case of micro-transactions, you don't have to buy it, you're right. However, they intentionally make it so that in order to remain competitive (in online environments), you have no choice but to buy their stupid upgrades. EA is at the forefront of that movement as well. Eventually these kind of trends lead to diminished value in the $60 product you paid for upfront.