Can you tell what kind of message is being sent to Electronic Arts with the YouTube voting on the gameplay trailer for the newly-announced Command & Conquer Rivals mobile game? 244 upvotes. 7,900 downvotes.
The strategy gameās ārevealā trailer isnāt doing much better. A thousand up. Nineteen thousand down.
Itās about as easy to point and laugh at that kind of statistical debacle as it to smash the downvote button on a newly-announced game that most of us havenāt played yet. Both are understandable, though itās a wonder how game companies keep allowing this to happen.
Surely EA had to know the displeasure it was going to receive bringing back a beloved decades-old franchise not in any type of PC real-time-strategy game glory but as a competitive phone game. Maybe they did and are just gritting their corporate teeth through it, trusting that any wave of negativity online wonāt impact this gameās ability to find an audience on mobile. Market research may show theyāll have the last profitable laugh.
Then again, in the interest of being player-friendly, it sure would be nice if companies like EA would find a way to level with fans about the status of the franchise theyāre awkwardly reviving. Go back to 2016 to another trailer-mass-downvote situation, when Nintendo brought back the Metroid series after a long hiatus with a four-player co-op game starring anonymous space cops. Is it not feasible to say: āWe are also working on/considering other Metroid/Command-and-Conquer games?ā Maybe try that next time?
Over on Twitter, thereās an official feed for the new C&C thatās trying to find some sunshine in this storm. Itās sporting a meager 288 followers and has tweeted six time. Whoever is running it retweeted legendary esports figure Sean Plott yesterday. Plott wrote: āAs much as I had the knee jerk āwtf mobile RTS no wayā reaction, Iāve had the chance to play C&C Rivals and its actually pretty tight. Iām very curious to see what itāll be like once it hits full release.ā
Game companies worry about how leaks might spoil the impact of a game announcement. But what about something like this? EA didnāt exactly set themselves up for a positive response.
Perhaps thereās no way around it, though. Such is the nature of E3, when game-makers and gamers are operating in a mode of anticipation and the facts of the present donāt matter much. Publishers and developers try to convince players that the games of the future will be terrific, and players react by providing their user reviews far in advance.