Because it doesn't matter how much we love the games that's bow buisness works if something takes a hit in sales then that's a problem
It might be a problem. But the type of problem it is varies immensely by context. Losing sales happens naturally in a game's lifetime as there are less people interested in the game that haven't bought the game already.
the point they have been inferior to the predecessors
They have not been. FFXV has been more successful then it's predecessors in the same amount of time it has been out. So has FFXIV. The problem starts when you compare games that go way far back when the costs associated with making video games has changed as has the time they take to develop. It's hard to compare an MMO Final Fantasy game with a Single-Player Final Fantasy game. And it's hard to compare games that came out ten years ago with games that come out now. The industry and customer base is different enough that straight number comparisons don't work.
someone hit the nail on the head with a preview comment stating that the devs just haven't matured into modern games lik other companies have managed to do yet
The only way SE is going to mature is by making games. And yes, sometimes that means they won't make a game that is quite as good as it could have been. What matters is what they do with their mistakes though. Particularly the mistakes in the development process. FFXIV is a good example of them learning something. So is FFXV once they got into gear. FFVIIR probably will be to as we already know they didn't make anywhere near as big of a mistake with advertising a vaporware game like they did with FFXV.
You obv dont like these facts and no fan would but you cant improve a game by ignoring them facts either it's a simple catch 22 do you turn your back on your childhood gaming or do you stick by it even with it's stupid decissions...
It's not even a Catch 22. You watch the reviews of the new games that come out, take a look at their game mechanics, and if you think you'll like playing it, you get the game. If you don't like what the reviews and playthroughs are showing you, you don't get the game. This is why I play FFXIV a lot, but haven't touched FFXV. One looked like fun, the other didn't. And you thank Square Enix for at least coming out with their old games on new hardware so they don't go the way of Nintendo games...
I apologise several times if I upset people but you took it to heart now your trolling.
Um... what? You aren't upsetting anyone. It's just that I find the video game market fascinating to look at and watching how SE has slowly been turning themselves around has been interesting to watch.
there is nothing that can put any of them people in the place apart from a hate thread about how sales has nothing to do with how good a game is.
They do not. Some of the best games I've played are small indie titles that barley make back the money they take to make. If sales were the only things game companies cared about, no one would ever make games like that. But you see people trying to make them all the time. So obviously something besides the money is driving them to make really good games.
Your right persona is amazing and never sold half as many games but at least it always sold more copies with each game I would like to say.
This is like saying an author is only doing well if they sell more volumes of later books in a series then the first book. Which isn't how it works. A lot of people will play/read the first game/book in a series if the series is serial and decide they don't like it and then never go on to play /read the next game/book in the series. It simply doesn't work that way.
Final Fantasy games are also interesting is that none of the games are really part of the same series. FFVIII is not the squeal to FFVII and so on. They are really all separate games that just so happen to have similar titles made by the same company. Seeing numbered FF games sell different amounts should be expected because just because you like one doesn't mean you will like the others.
mmo was mentioned that they are greatly improved with the ability to interact with other players change the world add new things it's a forever context
I have all dlc for ffxv myself so I agree with you there fantastic
but it took element from each game all the best elements and made it ff online
they didn't need to call it final fantasy 14 and
I have not been the only one to say that even friends of mine have cut me off when I call it ff14
What do you mean by this? The multiplayer DLC from FFXV is totally different from the multiplayer content of FFXIV. There is no relationship between the two.
FFXIV does take elements from all the other Final Fantasy games. So do all the other Final Fantasy games. It also has a completely original story in it that is separate from all the other Final Fantasy stories like a single-player FF game does, and it is one of the best Final Fantasy stories out of the entire franchise. Just for the story alone, FFXIV deserves to be compared to the stories of the other FF games at a bare minimum.
But it doesn't matter even if I get humiliated for one thing I mite have i genuinely believe that the ffvii remake its 100% for the devs and the fans to help improve gaming within the final fantasy franchise theres nothing wrong with that and I dont understand why people have been so upset about it.
What I feel like you are saying is that everything is doom and gloom because the Final Fantasy franchise isn't out-performing the better known games. That isn't how the industry works though. And it makes it hard to take what you are saying seriously. Square Enix itself doens't seem to think the franchise is in anywhere near as much danger as it was ten years ago. And say what you want, FFXV made Square Enix money in the long run, as is FFXIV. So enough people like their newer games to make it lucritive for Square Enix to make more modern Final Fantasy games. That don't sound like what you are describing at all.
I feel they have gone a bit cash cow as all companies do but I dont think that should ever have been the case with final fantasy because it has such a super high fan bass and it's not an early days game it's a well established game and name that everyone knows.
This is the opposite of how it usually works. The better a game is known, the more money can be gotten out of the fans of it if the devs do it right. That the main Final Fantasy games aren't pushing that kind of business model is a point in Square Enix's favor. You look at the main Final Fantasy games, and they can be enjoyed without the DLC, and the bulk of the DLC that is out for FFXV is worth getting becuase of what it adds to the experience. FFXIV is a little different since it's an MMO, but there's never been an expansion for it no one ever thought wasn't worth getting. Quite the opposite...