[quote name='J03_b' timestamp='1334954882' post='4933346']
And if you think I'm wrong than I welcome you to provide actual game details that you think attract people to buy the same CoD game time and time again instead of other games. (keep in mind, I say "instead of other games" because CoD is the top selling FPS franchise of all time)
Erm,
you are working under a flawed assumption that buying one game will prevent someone from buying another. Given that most publishers stagger game releases to remove this 'one or other' setup your assumption is garbage.
[/quote]
Oh hey look, I directly proved you wrong in the exact text that you quoted. But maybe I didn't elaborate enough again...... I am not assuming that buying one game will in any way prevent someone from buying another. What I am saying is that people do buy Call of Duty instead of other games. I say this because
Call of Duty sells more than other games. Statistically speaking, most FPS players buy Call of Duty instead of Halo. Most FPS players buy CoD instead of Mag. Most FPS players buy CoD instead of Gears of War. Most FPS players buy CoD instead of Battlefield 3. Is
that "to" hard to understand?
As for the rest, I understand that you apparently buy the games mostly for the campaign and you value them at $60 but I think you are unique in that regard. I'm not going to argue that the campaigns aren't fun or that they aren't worth buying every time, because although I haven't played them all they seem pretty fun. However, me and probably a majority of the FPS community buy games mainly for the multiplayer and spend much more time playing it than the campaign. There are hundreds of thousands of matches played online per day in Halo and probably Call of Duty, and I'm sure that the math behind that would prove that most players spend more time on the multiplayer(I don't feel like figuring it out)
And just to clarify, I play PLENTY of mainstream games, Halo for one is the second top selling FPS after CoD and World of Warcraft is the biggest MMO of all time. I could list many more, but I assure you that I judge games purely on entertainment value. Hell, I fully agree that Angry Birds is well worth a dollar to play and that the creators deserve my dollar if I were to buy it. However, I would much sooner pay more than that for Crush the Castle on Armorgames.com, wouldn't you? You've probably played Angry Birds but have you ever played Crush the Castle?
Oh and in this case, I would not buy Angry Birds. The reason is that I got tired of that style of game because I played Crush the Castle so much. And if I were to only buy one of a game like that (which I'm sure the average gamer does), it would be Crush the Castle. This does not necessarily apply to FPS games, but if I were to buy every FPS game that I wanted, it would be Halo, then BF3, then Mag, then Crysis, then CoD. Unfortunately I don't have the money for all of those so I only have Halo and BF3 now.
Sorry for such an extensive post, but when I try to be brief I get remarks like "I'm assuming that you are assuming this" or "I'm assuming you're a hipster"