- Aug 7, 2019
- 155
- 238
You should understand that a game or program is not really something you can have like a """progress bar"" so you use the version to give at least a little bit of understanding on the other side, you don't know when a product is finished , and its like that in EVERY kind of program, so you don't need to study an it major to understand it, look it up its a true fact ,Wikipedia that, np ill do it for you :Well you gotta realize majority of people arent IT majors or have worked on a closed beta/alpha game.
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And thats the thing!Most when they see a version number instinctively equate it to progress on the overall game.
0.2.21.3 = 0(is not FINISHED).2(this game got major changes and i should check the changelog to understand what).21(dayum they did a lot of minor things since this big update,maybe i should check the changelog).3(eh probably fixed a couple of bugs in this version, if they added something should be more stable)
I assume english is not your first language , not trying to offend(same as me) but i don't understand your point here, of course 1.0 has more content and yes the version changes based on patch/updates soo i don't understand where you are trying to go.A version 1.0 vs a version 0.2, people are gonna assume the 1.0 has more content and right fully so because playing games we have been led to believe when a game is patched/updated the version is also changed to showcase that.
Its choosed by the dev how to number a version based on milestones, but is also a good way to make someone understand the working behind thatIts more so the DEV side of games that equate version numbers to "builds" rather than progress I would say.
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