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5 years ago
"SimsLovinLycan;c-17433369" wrote:
This is a good point. After all, even though LEGO is a company which primarily makes products for kids roughly 3 years old to 12 years old, they still do a lot for their adult fans too. They make advanced building kits with thousands of pieces that sell at a price point that only adults and working teens can afford, they sponsor building contests, they support artists who use LEGO bricks as their primary medium. In their LEGO films, they reference classic sets and older LEGO media (like the Gold Ninja joke in the Ninjago movie). They appreciate all of the fans, young and old, who've played with LEGO bricks over the generations, and they try to keep not just the kids and the teens and adults who are still into LEGO, but also older people who may not have touched anything LEGO in 15 or 20 years, but still have fond memories and warm feelings attached to the brand happy.
EA could and should be that way with The Sims
With a long-running series, you can't forget about your long-time fans. LEGO knows that, SquareEnix knows that...but EA has yet to learn this lesson.
So true!!! I feel ea does the exact opposite. It's disrespectfull... Older players, the ones that have been with the game for 2 decades, are not listened. It's like everything we say is because we want the game to live in the past. But that's not true. We just want quality.
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Discuss The Sims Medieval, the original The Sims, and speculate on the future of the franchise, including Project Rene.
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