Ubisoft: ‘Get Comfortable’ With Not Owning Games - You Will Own Nothing

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Article (Archive)
Insider Gaming said:
In a recent interview, Ubisoft’s Director of Subscriptions, Philippe Tremblay, spoke at length about the state of play in our increasingly digital global landscape. He laid out the present and future of streaming services, particularly covering the recent changes made to the Ubisoft+ service, which has undergone a slight rebrand.

In his words, ‘millions’ of users have flocked to Ubisoft’s cloud-based streaming service since it launched, and there are expectations that the number of users adopting these subscription-based models will swell as time goes on. He stressed that gamers should get comfortable with these services and that despite some users still clinging to physical games, a consumer shift ‘needs to happen’.

Digital Is The Future

In recent years, we’ve seen the concept of cloud gaming and subscription services explode. From PlayStation Now to Xbox Game Pass and from GeForce NOW to EA Play, it seems like there are countless services that you can pay a monthly fee for to unlock a host of ever-changing games. There are tens of millions of people – if not more – with multiple subscriptions, covering the field and gaining access to hundreds of titles.

Ubisoft recently amended its service – Ubisoft+ – with a slight rebrand. The core offering is now known as ‘Ubisoft+ Premium’ and it operates alongside other tiers, such as ‘Ubisoft+ Classics’, which gives players access to back-catalogue games – but nothing brand-new.

In the interview with GamesIndustry, Philippe Tremblay spoke about the usage of Ubisoft+ and how consumer trends have evolved:

There are multiple behaviours. There are definitely a lot of people who come in for one game and then decide to buy it after the subscription ends. That’s part of the reality and that’s ok with us.

He referenced the ‘tremendous value’ of subscription services, pointing out that subscribers of the Ubisoft+ Premium service get access to the latest games from the moment they’re released – and that typically means they’re getting the highest tier of that game, too.

There’s still room for more gamers to get on board, though, as Tremblay explained:

One of the things we saw is that gamers are used to, a little bit like DVD, having and owning their games. That’s the consumer shift that needs to happen. They got comfortable not owning their CD collection or DVD collection. That’s a transformation that’s been a bit slower to happen in games. As gamers grow comfortable in that aspect… you don’t lose your progress. If you resume your game at another time, your progress file is still there. That’s not been deleted. You don’t lose what you’ve built in the game or your engagement with the game. So it’s about feeling comfortable with not owning your game.

Soon, Ubisoft will onboard Activision Blizzard games to its subscription-based offering as part of the recent deal with Microsoft to acquire streaming rights for the games. Over time, subscription services are soaking up a staggering portion of revenue in the games industry – will this peak soon, or is the growth of these services persistently exponential?

For more Insider Gaming coverage, check out the news that GAME in the UK could stop trade-ins
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Ever notice every game company pushing this mentality also hasn't made a game worth playing in many years?

2023 was probably the first year where I've seen any games come out that were actually fun to play, and none of them came from these dinosaur studios, which have for the past decade or so replaced fun with "collectibles", a nakedly cynical gaming of behavioral psychology.

This is why counterstrike, a game older than most zoomers, is still going strong while new "looter shooters" keep dying over and over again.

It's why the most popular games now are indie and AA.
 
Current AAA studios have been dying a slow death for a while.

AAA studios stopped making games "fun" and started making them into visually pretty hoarding simulators.

When a game is fun you don't have to do that.
Metal: Hellsinger
case and point.
Graphics in hellsinger are barely above doom 95 but it's a fun ass game to play and watch.
 
AAA studios stopped making games "fun" and started making them into microtransaction generators where the content is pre-sliced and diced so they can drip feed you what used to be a full game for more money.

Fixed that for you.
 
This is the same company that thought Mr. Caffeine was a great idea. I won't have any problem not owning of their shit games anyway, as I haven't played any of them other than Far Cry 5 in the last 8 or so years. They ruined pretty much every franchise they own at this point and I'm still salty they turned Rainbow Six: Patriots into the Wish.com version of Counter Strike.
 
If you're one to jump on GOG deals like me, make sure you run the installer at least once. I've had many instances where one or many of the bin files were corrupted and required a redownload.

The perfect corollary to not owning games is it's not stealing if you could never own them.
I just keep backups of the installers themselves.
 
Again Ubisoft if you're going to make gaming such a overpriced and unaffordable hobby and not even let me keep my games why Should I spend my money on your games?
I can easily play older games, go outside or save my money and find another hobby.

Ubisoft get ready for me to not care about your company and stop buying video games.
 
The only Ubi game I have played since Far Cry 4 (on deep sale) was Rocksmith.... which as stated they turned into a shittier subscription model version of itself that I refuse to touch. I will go back to 90's style tabs or a 60's style tape recorder like Eric Clapton if I have to. Fuck them.

I went to play a 'free' Activision title (Dead Space) using gamespass and wasted an hour trying to link the accounts to no avail.... fuck you Activision and fuck your shortbus software too.

I literally only play AA/Indy shit on Steam anymore, at least those companies can control scope and give a fuck about gameplay, and they can't afford to make their own in house bloated retard engines so they all run beautifully on Unreal (except Dyson Sphere which actually runs beautifully on Unity somehow). The closest to AAA I get these days is FromSoft and I would argue that they are just a very marketable AA studio (enjoy it while it lasts).

They fucked up the new Forza so bad that I don't even have that to play anymore.... and with it goes my last point of contact with normie-box players. Fuck AAA, fuck consoles.... Wake me up when they port GT-7 to PC or to watch the GTA6 dumpster fire launch in 2 years.... I'll be playing some autistic shit in the meantime.
 
I don't know anyone who would want to subscribe to Ubisoft+, especially for $17.00 a month. You just have to wait a few months and all their games end up in the bargin bin. I'm sure that's the reason why they are pushing for a subscription service instead of ownership, but they have to realize that their games aren't worth that high monthly fee.
 
The only Ubi game I have played since Far Cry 4 (on deep sale) was Rocksmith.... which as stated they turned into a shittier subscription model version of itself that I refuse to touch. I will go back to 90's style tabs or a 60's style tape recorder like Eric Clapton if I have to. Fuck them.
The fitgirl repack works and has like 1500 songs in it. Worth the torrent if you like the game but don't want to keep shoveling out money.
 
The fitgirl repack works and has like 1500 songs in it. Worth the torrent if you like the game but don't want to keep shoveling out money.

I have cracked the shit out of 2014 (to the point where it doesn't even work without Reaper but I can record and use my pedals/DSP) and I have a ton of CDLC but it fucking crashes every time it looses focus (new problem, used to work). I will DL this but the idea of getting all configured again is discouraging.
 
Back
Top Bottom