I have not pre-ordered Destiny 2 because I have not seen ANY actual gameplay.
Anyone that pre-orders Destiny 2 may aswell go and put a £10,000 deposit on a house that has not been built.
Same principle applies to Destiny 2. Why would anyone with any working brain cells put their money down for a product that isn't finished or even at a stage to showcase it.
Common sense people....
Luke Smith was right with you guys.
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Hey heads up you can cancel pre-orders
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🤦♂️ it's not about the ability to cancel bruh. Smh
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Edited by KNIGHTofLIGHT I: 4/12/2017 11:48:15 PM[quote]I put 50k down on my house before it was built.... Based off the builders previous houses I had no issues doing it. I put $100 down on destiny 2, based on bungies previous game I had no issues doing it.[/quote] This is for all the people replying thinking "what a bad analogy." So what if the builder didn't have a good rep? Would you still pay it to him? What if you thought D1 was bad? Would you still pre-order it? It the end this is all in [u]your[/u] opinion. And the analogy doesn't matter. Just think about it understand that even if it is a bad analogy, you can still get what he means.
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Playing devils advocate, have you ever crowd funded anything?
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[quote]Playing devils advocate, have you ever crowd funded anything?[/quote] Nope and never will. Next question.
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That was my only question. While I agree pre ordering isn't great for the video game market, people can do whatever they want with their earnings
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Edited by KNIGHTofLIGHT I: 4/12/2017 11:16:33 PMBump. Gotta see the house to put the money down. Or at least know if it will be what you want.
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Actually, only people that preorder get the opportunity to experience the gameplay rather than just watch it. And if I don't like what I play in the beta, oh look, I can just cancel my preorder.
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You get that if you preorder after game play showcase...
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Regardless. If destiny is more of the same, then I'm happy to buy it. Let's be honest, no matter how bad destiny 2 could be, they're not gonna change the fact that it's gonna be both a pve quest based game in a universe I enjoy, with pvp also, with some of the best gunplay of any game I've ever played. The gunplay mechanics is not going to change in any drastic way. I enjoy the gunplay, I can afford to buy games, it's as simple as that.
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If you've got money to burn, that's your choice.
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Edited by Un1337ninj4: 4/12/2017 10:01:41 PMSimple really, I like Destiny. I'm ready to pay for more Destiny and I'd rather keep my cases consistent with two steelbooks rather than break that fold. Was I disappointed with my Ghost Edition purchase? Aye, but not discontent as proven by the time I invest into the title. If you're still hung up about lukems post TTK (and how it actually met the bar for a majority of its hype material save certain exotics (Sol/Void 'Lords in particular)) and its pre-release interviews/etc. featuring him outside of that nibble than I'd say it's not a stretch to say he can swing by your door with a MA5B replica signed by the original Halo team + a 5K check and you'd still be salty.
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Edited by Rappo000: 4/12/2017 9:55:06 PM[quote]I have not pre-ordered Destiny 2 because I have not seen ANY actual gameplay. Anyone that pre-orders Destiny 2 may aswell go and put a £10,000 deposit on a house that has not been built. Same principle applies to Destiny 2. Why would anyone with any working brain cells put their money down for a product that isn't finished or even at a stage to showcase it. Common sense people.... Luke Smith was right with you guys.[/quote] PUTTING MONEY DOEN ON A HOUSE THAT HASN'T BEEN BUILT!!!!!!!!!1122 [spoiler]that's literally how the housing market works, twelvie[/spoiler]
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Edited by KNIGHTofLIGHT I: 4/12/2017 11:12:54 PM
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Edited by N00bMaster69: 4/13/2017 7:45:24 AMYep waste of space morons everywhere.
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You may want to remove the re... word before you get banned. These muppets aren't worth a ban.
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Done thanks for the heads up
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Biggest thing you can do with your two brain cells is cancel your pre-order after the beta launches.
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Hmmm let's see. Buying a house Vs buying a video game. Yes i see what you mean, they are the same thing. Terrific analogy there. 👍
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[quote]I have not pre-ordered Destiny 2 because I have not seen ANY actual gameplay. Anyone that pre-orders Destiny 2 may aswell go and put a £10,000 deposit on a house that has not been built. Same principle applies to Destiny 2. Why would anyone with any working brain cells put their money down for a product that isn't finished or even at a stage to showcase it. Common sense people.... Luke Smith was right with you guys.[/quote] ANY
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I actually had a amazing house built that way.. infact that's how it works if you buy a brand new home. Or a brand new car. What are you 12, or on welfare.
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[quote]I actually had a amazing house built that way.. infact that's how it works if you buy a brand new home. Or a brand new car. What are you 12, or on welfare.[/quote] So you put money down on a Car that hasn't been manufactured yet? You don't happen to see the Car being showcased in an advert and you go to the showroom to test drive it? Hmm ok. PS: I'm over 40 and on a nice 6 Figure salary.
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Then how is 60 to 100 bucks a big deal.
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That was such a poor example to use fella, everyone gets houses built in that exact way you describe lmfao.
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[quote]That was such a poor example to use fella, everyone gets houses built in that exact way you describe lmfao.[/quote] Yes, the dumbasses that have no clue are the ones that put down money before the house is built. Now if you see my reply before; there was a programme on TV here a few years back showing what happens to people who put deposits on houses that have not been built. Developers can do anything they want after they get your deposit. They either go "bankrupt" or change the smallprint in the contract which leaves the home buyer with a worthless home. As in the TV programme, the smallprint was changed from Freehold to Leasehold which meant they home owners did not "own" the home they put money down on, but ended up having to pay rent to the Leaseholder. So I think my analogy was perfect. Never put money down on something that you have not seen demonstrated.