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I opened up my Origin client today, which is something I haven't done in some time, to see if they had new games out. All I could see were old games, games from other developers, or the fifteenth reiteration of old games, mostly sports.

I opened up my Origin client today, which is something I haven't done in some time, to see if they had new games out. All I could see were old games, games from other developers, or the fifteenth reiteration of old games, mostly sports.

5 comments

[–] KillBill 2 points (+2|-0)

I think a lot of these big companies buy studios and/or franchises to eliminate competition more than any other reason. So when the type of management that would do a thing like that, tries their hand at actually managing a company that can innovate and create there is a clash of ideals and ultimately the talent they buy withers and dies.

[–] jobes 1 points (+1|-0)

When was the last game where EA truly innovated? BF1942?

[–] Sarcastaway 2 points (+2|-0)

They've arguably "innovated" the microtransaction model. I can't think of anyone else using that model on console games before EA. And its really changed the market. I'd argue that Fallout 76 might have been a decent game if EA hadn't first proved delivering a half-baked shitloaf of a game could make millions.

[–] [Deleted] 2 points (+2|-0)

That game was developed in 2002 by DICE. DICE didn't become part of EA until 2006. So, maybe Mirrors Edge, which was announced in 2007. Still a DICE game.