Fans upset with the outcome of Mass Effect 3 have been crying "false advertising" since the get go, arguing that the ability to "completely shape" their experience as promised by EA and BioWare never materialized. According to the Better Business Bureau's Majorie Stephens, they were right.
In a posting on the consumer protection organization's Consumer News and Opinion Blog cloyingly titled "Mass Effect 3 is Having a ‘Mass Effect' on Its Consumers for Better or Worse", Stephens explains that technically yes, BioWare's marketing campaign for Mass Effect 3 does contain false advertising. It's a problem of absolutes, something that should be avoided at all cost in advertising circles.
The issue at stake here is, did Bio Ware falsely advertise? Technically, yes, they did. In the first bullet point, where it states "the decisions you make completely shape your experience", there is no indecision in that statement. It is an absolute.
Let's put this in context. If I were to tell you I make the very best lasagna in the entire world, that's an absolute. Worse, it's an absolute based on opinion, which would open me up even more. Is that false advertising? Yes, my lasagna sucks. It is, however, better a few days later with the addition of liberal amounts of shredded cheese.
Stephens also analyzes the statement "Along the way, your choices drive powerful outcomes, including relationships with key characters, the fate of entire civilizations, and even radically different ending scenarios." It's a statement that could indicate that the previous statement wasn't quite true, but a consumer would have to dig deep to come to that conclusion.
The lesson to be learned here is companies should give careful consideration to how they word their advertisements. Otherwise, there could be detrimental effects, especially in the era of social media and online forums.
If I ever form a game company, we're never saying anything. We'll just quietly slip our games under your door and run away.
Does this mean that BioWare is in some kind of trouble with the BBB? No, but its blogger agrees with the whole false advertising thing, which should make everyone feel a lot better about the whole thing.
"Mass Effect 3 is Having a ‘Mass Effect' on Its Consumers for Better or Worse" [Better Business Bureau Blog]
Today's new Mass Effect 3 Resurgence Pack expansion is supposed to be free, so don't accidentally buy the 320 Microsoft Point version. The official BioWare Twitter feed delivered that warning this afternoon:
Please DO NOT purchase the 320 pt. 'Resurgence Pack' consumable on XBL dash. This was erronously uploaded & we are working to take it down!
Stick with the free version, people. The Resurgence Pack is supposed to improve your multiplayer experience with two new maps, new characters, new weapons and more.
Q&A, an Australian current affairs program, ran an episode over the weekend about Easter. A big part of the show is that, while conversations are taking place in the studio, a ticker on the bottom of the screen lets viewers get their $0.02 in.
Given the topic involved religion, then, it's easy seeing how ceekel got her Tweet past the producers, using the show to drop a little Mass Effect 2 backstory on an unsuspecting Australian public.
Q&A Believes In Mass Effect And The Lazarus Project [Kotaku AU]
We're not talking developer, designer, producer or sound engineer. Today's Speak Up on Kotaku from commenter nicp1112 is all about what job you'd like to be hired for in an actual video game. Still confused?
Hey Kotaku, been thinking about it a lot and wanted to ask everyone else. Is there a job in a video game you'd want to have? And I mean in the actual world of the game.
I dream about being a pilot of those ships in sci fi games. Maybe a fighter or a dropship, like the ones in Mass Effect or like that one girl in Deus Ex: Human Revolution.
If you went to the PAX East convention in Boston, this past weekend, you would have thought that Mass Effect was the biggest video game on the planet. Mass Effect cosplayers were everywhere, and so many of them were amazing.
For starters, there was the guy who shows up as the Krogan warrior Grunt. I shot a video of him. Go ahead and watch him do his thing in the video above. Cool, huh?
I found Grunt at the PAX East BioWare lounge on Saturday, where Mass Effect super-fans of all tastes showed up. (You'll see some Dragon Age devotees in the background, too.)
Click the images to expand them.
I found a Samara
Liara T'Soni there.
Here's a Tali'Zorah nar Rayya, who didn't want to be photographed without her gun. (I love the feet!)
Thane Krios was a total badass. And see who that is in the background?
UPDATE: I just found an extra shot... here's Dr. Chakwas.
I had met this extraordinary Mordin Solus a day earlier at a BioWare panel. Stunning work.
Mordin was a few feet away from a female Commander Shepard, who was flanked by Dragon Age cosplayers.
There were so many great cosplayers at the BioWare panel, I thought it would be cool to get at least half of them in one big shot.
Before PAX East, I'd seen lots of Commander Shepards before. The aliens were new to me, a wonderful sight one and all.
I guess I should have expected PAX East to be a Mass Effect cosplay extravaganza considering who I met on day one, as soon as I walked through the door, the face model for Mass Effect's Samara and Morinth:
Today at PAX East, Stephen Totilo ran into a familiar face-Rana McAnear, the actress who provides the official model for Mass Effect's Asari Justicar Samara and her unhinged sex-killer daughter Morinth. More »
They got 1200 Mass Effect fans into one room at PAX East this weekend. They—some folks from the game's development studio BioWare—asked people to raise their hands if their favorite game was the first Mass Effect. Some raised their hands.
Mass Effect 2? Most people raised their hands.
Mass Effect 3? Few hands went up.
And then they asked who favored FemShep, which I guess is another way to ask who plays as her. The very short video here shows the result.
BioWare is planning to flesh out the existing ending of Mass Effect 3, but that doesn't mean fans haven't already done some fleshing-out of their own.
(Spoilers!)
The much-discussed "Indoctrination Theory" floats the notion that Shepard in fact didn't make it to the final decision at all, and that much of the controversial ending took place in his/her mind. The decisions at the end (or at least, two of them) are controlled entirely by the Reapers.
There are many variations on this theory out there, each supported by a ton of clues gathered from the game. (This one from the BioWare forums is a good example, and there's also this video that breaks it down.)
But what do BioWare's developers think? At a PAX East panel today attended by Kotaku's Kate Cox, one of the panelists allowed that the indoctrination theory "illustrates how committed the [Mass Effect] fanbase is," but said that while "fans will interpret it in their own way," they didn't want to comment either way for fear of being "prescriptive."
Plus, they've got that "Extended Cut" DLC to make. "We want the content to speak for itself, and we'll let it do so."
That response gives me the impression that BioWare didn't expressly intend the Indoctrination Theory's interpretation. But who knows? It's always possible that they've got a suuuuper good poker face and are really going to blow our minds this summer.
Check out Kate's full liveblog of the Mass Effect panel here.