- Aug 17, 2019
- 253
- 286
The problem with it being labled as completed is that since we have no idea how many more DLCs or costumes they're going to add, I don't want to keep downloading essentially the same thing only to find there's another version with minor changes a couple of months later. My download speeds aren't that great, and to keep downloading a 1.6Gb game just for a new costume is pretty bad. It would be different if you could just download the updated files, but as it is it's annoying.
Also I disagree with the definition of "complete" used in this thread. If a game is still being actively worked on and updated with some form of content, regardless of how minor the update is, if the game is not the "final version" then that isn't complete. The story might be complete, but the game itself is not. Though honestly when it comes to things like DLC, it's pretty difficult to define what "complete" is. To use a conventional game as an example, the Witcher 3 vanilla was a complete game when it was first released, but I would never be able to play it like that anymore since it doesn't hold a candle to the version with all the DLC, which I would now consider to be the "complete" game.
Also I disagree with the definition of "complete" used in this thread. If a game is still being actively worked on and updated with some form of content, regardless of how minor the update is, if the game is not the "final version" then that isn't complete. The story might be complete, but the game itself is not. Though honestly when it comes to things like DLC, it's pretty difficult to define what "complete" is. To use a conventional game as an example, the Witcher 3 vanilla was a complete game when it was first released, but I would never be able to play it like that anymore since it doesn't hold a candle to the version with all the DLC, which I would now consider to be the "complete" game.