If I were a cynical type (and I’m honestly not, although my trust in the game team was exhausted a while ago), I might suggest the team operates on a “cycle of abuse” marketing approach: mistreat the customer repeatedly and offer scraps just before a big holiday/event (like July 4) when they come out with a better than average offer for a less than unreasonable price. Customers are so relieved to not be taken for granted that they jump on the “sweet” offer they can’t refuse. All is forgiven, the team and customer are reconciled...and the cycle begins anew.
Of course, that’s only what a cynical person might think...
If I were a cynical type (and I’m honestly not, although my trust in the game team was exhausted a while ago), I might suggest the team operates on a “cycle of abuse” marketing approach: mistreat the customer repeatedly and offer scraps just before a big holiday/event (like July 4) when they come out with a better than average offer for a less than unreasonable price. Customers are so relieved to not be taken for granted that they jump on the “sweet” offer they can’t refuse. All is forgiven, the team and customer are reconciled...and the cycle begins anew.
Of course, that’s only what a cynical person might think...
Dr. Zola
It’s basically the same principle as an abusive relationship. Berate them, hurt them, and then when it seems like they might FINALLY leave you… take them out for dinner and lie about how you’ll change and that you’re sorry. Rinse. Repeat.
yea what's the point when the cheaters will just take aw rewards and continue beating you down without Kabam punishing them properly. Just let this one pass... send a message.
Comments
Of course, that’s only what a cynical person might think...
Dr. Zola
It’s basically the same principle as an abusive relationship. Berate them, hurt them, and then when it seems like they might FINALLY leave you… take them out for dinner and lie about how you’ll change and that you’re sorry. Rinse. Repeat.