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400°

BlizzCon Starts With an Apology, But Blizzard Doesn't Change Its Stance

Blizzard President J. Allen Brack started off BlizzCon by apologizing for suspending a 'Hearthstone' pro after they made a pro Hong Kong statement.

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Community2065d ago
CaptainObvious8782064d ago

You'll notice he's wearing a pride badge near his neck.

Guess what was blurred out in the china blizcon stream?

2064d ago
GameBoyColor2065d ago

"we're sorry we got caught, we'll try not to next time" essentially

sander97022065d ago

It's more of "We're sorry you feel that way".

rainslacker2064d ago (Edited 2064d ago )

They aren't required to acquiesce to the demands or beliefs of the community. But they will receive criticism for their actions or views. Saying they're sorry is more just saying that they apologize they can't do anything for those that disagree, because they have their own views.

For the record, I think they were in the wrong for what they did, just saying that they are allowed to have their own beliefs.

Godmars2902064d ago

The issue is the willingness of a seemingly Western, democratic, company bowing to the political preferences of communist authoritarian government. Bowing to the preferences of a larger market over the smaller one its based in.

Either isn't generally good for us in terms of consumerism or general/political expressionism.

jonesmiller041012064d ago

To them it's not about principle and not even about being impartial. It's about 💵

2064d ago
rainslacker2064d ago (Edited 2064d ago )

I know what the issue is, and as I said, I think they were wrong with what they did. But, as a western company, in a democratic free country, they are right to do what they want within the laws of the country itself.

They're doing what they're doing because of money. I doubt they really care about the politics of it beyond that.

@Rare

No, I wouldn't change my stance. I believe they have the right to do what they want on their platform, with their content. That's what freedom of expression is all about. Just because I don't agree with them doesn't mean that I have a right to take that away from them. I have the right to disagree with them, and if I so choose, test their will towards enforcing it through some sort of protest. But, I would still be subject to the consequences of my actions. In this case, if I were to protest on their platforms, I'd likely be moderated or banned.

Evelyn Beatrice Hall wrote, "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."

That's just as meaningful to living in a free democratic society with freedom of speech as standing up for what you believe in on other issues. If not more so, because one day, you may be in the position of being silenced.

Defending someone's right does not mean that you agree with what they're saying. In turn, I am free to criticize them as I see fit, they are free to listen or not, and the circle goes on indefinitely.

In this case, I don't agree with Blizzard, but they are free to do as they want, as they aren't not required to allow people free speech on their platforms. I'll personally criticize them for their stance, because I think they were wrong on many levels. Both philosophically and politically, and I believe they took action despite what happened not being against their rules of conduct at the time.

Godmars2902064d ago

@rainslacker:
Trouble is, "in current era", what someone else says, which you would defend, often entails removing your right to say anything. Its a tightrope that shouldn't be solely balanced by the amount of money you have, have access to or even claim to have access to.

China is attempting to dictate what people from other countries say and think about it through their economic presence, and companies like Blizzard are all too willing to do their bidding for profit alone. At the cost of the moral awareness to defend what others have to say.

rainslacker2063d ago

Your argument states that Blizzard is removing someone's right to say anything, and by context you mean say something about the political situation. They haven't removed that right from the person. They don't have that kind of power to completely censor the person, or those who want to talk about it. The fact we're talking abotu it proves that. That person, and we, are free to go and speak our mind on the topic, rally others around our beliefs, or protest in any way he sees fit.

What Blizzard has removed is his ability to do so on their platforms, either directly or through those that use their content. He can still try to do those things, but he'll end up facing whatever consequence Blizzard sets out to impose. At which point, he can still go elsewhere. The government won't get involved, and outside him doing something illegal to say what he has to say, all Blizzard has the right to do is moderate their own platforms in any way they see fit.

I know what China is trying to do, and while that's a good discussion to talk about, it's not directly the topic of the article at hand, or what I was replying to. I don't know how many times I can say the same thing so people understand that I'm not defending Blizzard's actions, but I will always defend free speech, even if it's Blizzard right to exercise in a way that I don't agree with.

It's not a inalienable right granted by law that someone is allowed to say whatever they want, wherever they want. The right to free speech only applies to the government censoring people or preventing them from speaking as they want, outside some specefic exclusions. It also prevents government from from seeking recourse should you say something that they don't want you to say...again, outside specific exclusions. Free speech does not extend to not having to face repurcussions due to whatever speech, action, or belief one may have that may affect another person negatively, whether civil or criminal.

I don't disagree with people that what Blizzard did was wrong, I just disagree with the notion that people think that Blizzard is required to allow these people to say what they want on their platform, and that is what I was responding to. There is a moral and ethical side to the discussion, and I'm trying to do both sides, while everyone is arguing with me only on the moral side, seemingly thinking that I am somehow defending Blizzards actions.

It's just part of my pragmatic nature to point out that Blizzard isn't required to allow these people to do or say what they want on their platforms. They are given that right by the same right that gives us free speech due to corporations now being considered individuals, and they've had that right long before that even happened because of what free speech applies to to begin with. I don't agree with Blizzard on this case, and I will criticize it based on that merit, but I won't say that they shouldn't be allowed to have the same rights that are allowed to me by law, while also saying they aren't allowed to exercise that right because I disagree with them.

On the moral side, yes, what they are doing is wrong. On the ethical side, it's just as wrong to say they aren't allowed to exercise their rights because I disagree with them, as some are claiming that blizzard is wrong for censoring others.

While it'd be nice if it could go both ways, it just doesn't always happen like that, and money may be the reason for this scenario in the article, but the reasons for it are inconsequential to the right of the bearer.

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Specter2292065d ago

Does it really matter? All the people who were against Blizzard all of a sudden dont care anymore because Diablo was announced. I'm still not touching their games to hell with them.

2065d ago Replies(5)
MeteorPanda2065d ago

Who is to say they're the same ppl? I'm not buying d4 and I loved 1 and 2, give some ppl credit.

Loudness is not an indicator of the majority

brrdat2064d ago

same. gamers lack integrity because most of them are depressed as shit and use games as a coping mechanism. hard to blame them.

yoshatabi2064d ago

Lol what? That's a stupid assumption. You can literally say that about any hobby

2064d ago
yoshatabi2064d ago

Life is too short to not experience new videogames. Y'all take life too seriously. Not saying you should buy day one or anything. Just buy it when it's super cheap or something.

Muzikguy2064d ago

I don't have faith they'd do Diablo justice anymore even though I am a little bit curious how the new game will be. I haven't bought any Activision, Blizzard, EA, or Ubisoft games in quite some time. It's kind of nice actually and I still have tons of games to play without being nickel and dimed to death

jonesmiller041012064d ago

I am very excited and impressed with what I saw from Diablo 4 but I agree. To hell with them. This is bigger than games.

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Cmv382065d ago

I thought the gaming community was against sjws? Last I checked. But people are mad at blizzard for attempting to silence an sjw. Gamers are a fickle bunch.

Specter2292065d ago

How the heck did you get SJW from what's going on in Hong Kong?

gamer78042065d ago

I’m not sure how social justice fits into this at all... nice try though

xTonyMontana2065d ago (Edited 2065d ago )

SJWs are liberal lefty scumbags and their haters are trump supporting fascists.. embellished somewhat for effect. Regardless of where you stand though, all of them will agree on one thing, democracy is good and in the case of Americans, their first amendment. That's what riled up people with Blizzard.

bluefox7552065d ago

Weird how the "fascists" are the ones calling for free speech, and the "liberals" are the ones calling for censorship. We live in strange times.

2064d ago
CaptainObvious8782064d ago

You are right about your initial description on sjws, but the rest of what you said is absolute none sense.

You must have been living under a rock the past decade with noise cancelling headphones, because there' too many cases of leftist trying to silence and censor people and groups they don't like. There was a recent survey that found out that a large majority of millennials want to change the first amendment. Most leftists unequivocally DO NOT like the 1st amendment.

2065d ago Replies(4)
bluefox7552065d ago

Wait...what? People being oppressed by the Chinese communist government are SJWs?

Imalwaysright2064d ago

Strange thing to say considering that sjws are the ones constantly trying to silence and cancel people with dissenting views and opinions from their own while the anti-sjw crowd advocates for free speech. What Blizzard is doing is straight from the sjw playbook

rainslacker2064d ago

Blizzard's reasons are about money, not because they are taking a stand on the issue itself. Too much business interest in China for them to allow dissent on their platforms. Not that that's better than SJW's but they had a valid business reason to do what they did.

SJW's like to feel they have some place in the stuff that they rail against, but for the most part, act like high school drama queens, and most of their woes they bring upon themselves, then feel like making everyone else suffer for it when people don't pander to them.

brrdat2064d ago

there is a difference between someone who believes in human rights & social justice vs social justice warriors. the fact that you don't understand the difference makes me question your intelligence.

rainslacker2064d ago

SJW is a term used for those who make unreasonable demands and claim oppression where it doesn't exist, then go on to harass anyone who opposes them.

The thing in Hong Kong is actual oppression, with the only demand being freedom from a communist dictatorship, with a guy who merely made a peaceful protest, and did nothing to try and harass or bring down anyone who disagreed with him...including Blizzard.

Those two things are really quite different. One is a respectful use of one's voice and resources to affect positive change for millions on a global scale, the other is just a bunch of bored people on the internet who can't look past their own ego or even be bothered to learn about the issues they rail against. Two guesses as to which is which.

2064d ago
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40°

Bandai Namco Entertainment America Inc To Rock San Diego Comic-Con

This should make fans attending the ahow event happier as Bandai Namco is bringing some interesting game experiences to the convention.

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60°

Blacknut Announces a New Partnership With Kalypso Media

Blacknut has announced a brand new partnership with Kalypso Media. This will see Kalypso's gaming portfolio arrive on Blacknut.

The partnership will take hold from June 27th with the arrival of a selection of Klaypos Media titles onto the Blacknut cloud gaming platform.

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clouddosage.com
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170°

It Shouldn't Take Expedition 33's Success to Remind Square Enix That Turn-Based Still Sells

TNS: Expedition 33 was the wake-up call Square Enix needed, telling it turn-based RPGs are still popular, but that shouldn't have been the case.

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thenerdstash.com
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Relientk772d ago

True, but if it does get it through their thick skulls, then that works.

Although, the Dragon Quest 1 + 2 HD remakes will be turn-based and (the worst kept secret) Final Fantasy IX remake should be turn-based I would imagine. Let's see if any newer games go turn-based too.

thorstein2d ago (Edited 2d ago )

DQIII HD Remake was turned based and very successful. Then there was a really obscure turn based game came Balder's Gate 3. I heard it might have done well.

Profchaos1d 22h ago

I wouldn't be shocked if they switched ff to the vii remake combat system

PapaBop1d 18h ago

It won't get through to them though, despite E33's success, they still won't risk going fully turn based for their big budget projects simply because they are still in the mindset that it needs to be action combat to appeal to the mainstream audience. I hope I'm wrong but don't underestimate just how stubborn Japanese execs can be

barom1d 11h ago

Ya'll are hyping up Expedition 33 too much. Reminder that FF XVI sold 3 million in a week and it took Expedition 33 approximately a month to get to that (33 days to reach 3.3 million).

thorstein1d 7h ago

New IP vs established IP.

barom23h ago

1 platform vs 3 platforms
1 week vs 1 month

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DivineHand1252d ago

While it is true that Sqaure Enix has moved away from turn based games compared to how they were in the past, there is a good reason for it.

Older gamers will know this but during the ps2 era, we were flooded with turned based games from Japanese studios and this created a form of fatigue back then going into the next generation.

When Square released FF13, they received heavy criticism for making the game turned based like every other FF game and not doing enough to innovate. This is why they made FF15, FF7 Remake and FF16 have real time combat. It gave the series a fresh spin and has brought in new fans to the series.

I personally would be happy with either turned based FF or the real-time combat version we see today.

Shane Kim2d ago

Remake and Rebirth have "turn based" if you set it in the settings.

Lexreborn22d ago

Dang wish I saw your post before I made mine because we definitely feel the same way lol

Profchaos1d 22h ago (Edited 1d 22h ago )

Yeah hit the nail on the head but its like ww2 games we get hundreds of them then a decade of nothing and people start missing them i think we're going to start seeing them return

Claire, dragon quest even yakuza have seen turn based return

Runechaz1d 5h ago

Every Pokémon game is also a Turn Base RPG.. and selling millions

andy852d ago

Only need to look at their own game DQ 11 approaching 10 million to show there's a market. And that's not as big of a name as FF

Runechaz1d 5h ago

you can also look at the Pokemon game number

Tacoboto2d ago

Another article about Expedition 33 and Square Enix and turn-based games? This is starting to sound like propaganda.

The game didn't sell because it's a turn-based game; it sold and is enjoyed because it's a really freaking good game that released completed at a good price without gamer drama attached to it. No Mtx, no wait-until-it's-patched, minimal bloat, a self-contained story, no multiplatform BS. Just a solid original game that absolutely nails what it intended to do.

Redemption-642d ago

I was just about to say the same thing.

anast2d ago

This comment should have a 100 upvotes, at least.

CrimsonWing692d ago

Maybe try actually listening to the fans who have supported the series for decades. This habit of ignoring your core audience just to chase people who were never interested in Final Fantasy in the first place makes no sense. And when that approach fails, doubling down on it is beyond baffling.

The battle system has never been the main reason non-FF or non-JRPG players stayed away. Gutting the series’ identity to chase a broader market doesn’t attract new players. It just alienates the loyal ones.

Keep going down this road and we’ll end up with Final Fantasy Fortnite abomination or a F2P Battle Royale game.. Oh wait…

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