Installer Steam
log på
|
sprog
简体中文 (forenklet kinesisk)
繁體中文 (traditionelt kinesisk)
日本語 (japansk)
한국어 (koreansk)
ไทย (thai)
Български (bulgarsk)
Čeština (tjekkisk)
Deutsch (tysk)
English (engelsk)
Español – España (spansk – Spanien)
Español – Latinoamérica (spansk – Latinamerika)
Ελληνικά (græsk)
Français (fransk)
Italiano (italiensk)
Bahasa indonesia (indonesisk)
Magyar (ungarsk)
Nederlands (hollandsk)
Norsk
Polski (polsk)
Português (portugisisk – Portugal)
Português – Brasil (portugisisk – Brasilien)
Română (rumænsk)
Русский (russisk)
Suomi (finsk)
Svenska (svensk)
Türkçe (tyrkisk)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamesisk)
Українська (ukrainsk)
Rapporter et oversættelsesproblem
If people get burned out on the demo it could possibly have a negative effect on sales. I saw that happen with backpack battles...they had a free demo but they didn't ask for money for several months and by the time they did the game had peaked and dropped and a lot of people had moved on because they already played enough hours to get tired of it, so they decided not to buy.
Sorry for run-on sentence it's early.
Bring back the demo so those who missed it before can try it. I've been gaming since the atari 2600 and I've never seen "we dont want you trying our product" lead to a sale.
The concept of Early Access games, while hit or miss on the dev's own ability to commit an engaging or regular update schedule, is one I think the demo would have handedly earned my cash for. Or even at least to keep the demo itself.
If anything, I'd say then the threat of petering out interest would have to be from the demo being released too early with no tangible release date or followup to look forward to.
I certainly know I almost missed the second demo period entirely because I didn't believe there'd be anything going on after it'd expired its licence(?) and immediately disappeared from my library altogether on uninstall the first time round.