- Jul 11, 2018
- 644
- 373
because they are 2 separate numbers joined together, with the first one signifying the completion of major changes (like finishing the game with 1.0) and the 2nd one identifying smaller changes (like bugfixes).wtf about the versions of this game. I didn't play on purpose because there was version 0.9 thinking that 90% of the game was done. Logically, after version 0.9, there should be 1.0. And version 1.0 is a release and you can play a completely made game. And then bam version 0.10. What's the point in showing versions like that?
in development, there are also more numbers e.g. 1.26.8 and 1.26.10 which don't correspond to version but project numbers, like 1.26.8 is for a bugfix and 1.26.10 for the addition of a new weapon for example. Those project numbers are then combined into the next version number, in this case 1.27 and released.
At least that what I learned about that topic and some companies may have a different custom in using them since there is no real standard for version numbers