Well, andrew my boy, I don't believe that a company owes a consumer anything more than what they buy, but, there is a level of courtesy that is expected, for a company to be given a good name. i'll use for example blizzard... when they created warcraft II, they came out with some updates, and other crap, not much eh? well, when they made starcraft they came out w/ b.net, updates, constant support, etc. in other words, the standards have raised quite high. i'll answer those questions as exact as possible.
"I have a question (several, actually) -- when a publisher releases a game, do you feel that they owe you, the players of that game, updates to the game in perpeptuity?"
---There isn't a certain amounts of updates, you can't put a number on it, the amount of updates is the amount needed. definition of needed: when it costs your company money, or, when the consumer is pissed, or, the consumers are loyal, and honestly want a reasonable update.
How many updates do they owe you for the money you paid for the original game?
"Do they owe you more than a bug-free version of the game as it was originally presented?"
---Kinda goes hand-in-hand with the previous question/answer, but, i personally do feel if the consumer in general feels a certain update is needed, it should be done (ie. multi-player ev, which i know is in production)
"Do they owe you continual support/updates without you paying any more for this?"
---This question is kind of general, but I'll do my best. It depends on how big the update, if it's a really unneccesary update, then maybe should be charged (reduced for already purchased)
"Do they owe you a sequel to the game, no matter how well the original did?"
---no
Do they owe you a sequel even if the original author of the game is not interested in doing that himself?
---no
Do they owe it to you to release the source code to the game as open source?
---no
Should a game developer/publisher ignore financial motivations (and thus possibly face bankruptcy or at least a weak business model resulting in less captial for the next project) in order to appease their customers in the above scenarios?
---don't get crazy on us andrew, but in a way, yes. depends on your motives. are you in it for the money, or the satisfaction of happy people? i'll tell you, anything and everything i do that concerns the internet in any way, is only for the benefit of others (well, kinda untrue, because i'm happy when i make others happy, which is selfish, but in the most part).
I'm curious where people think the line is drawn... what you expect to get for your money.
---i expect to get what is sold, anything extra is up to the company
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Jeremy Woodruff as,
THE WHITE SHADOW