2009-11-13, 05:19 PM
(This post was last modified: 2009-11-13, 05:23 PM by Combattente.)
Grog Wrote:That's wrong. First of all, just because someone didn't spend countless hours searching for bugs doesn't make them an idiot. I sincerely doubt that you went out of your way to search for ANY bugs; everyone was too busy testing out 4th job classes, seeing how they were relatively new when Tespia was first released. Second, there were plenty of bugs found within all three Tespia. In fact, I can remember quite clearly the loads of bugs reported in Tespia threads on Sleepywood, and even the most clear-as-day glitches and bugs weren't fixed when the patch was put out.
I'm not saying that everyone who didn't spend countless hours searching bugs was an idiot (even if that was the main purpose of Tespia anyway), I'm just saying that the "loads of bugs" which were reported couldn't be fixed because, according to what NxProse said, there were more spam messages in their inbox than reports (for every useful bug, around 40-50 spam reports) so they couldn't read through all of them because it just wasn't worth the time.
If only there were less idiots who sent reports like that in all the three rounds, maybe things would've gone slightly differently.
Grog Wrote:Get real. Why would Nexon go through the trouble? Do you honestly think that there are people out there that want to search a game for bugs and glitches, and have no idea where to start? Do you really think, assuming that these "specially chosen content testers" find some bugs, Nexon would even fix them given their history regarding the previous three Tespias?
What I said above applies to this sentence as well.
Grog Wrote:Your application process is as flawed as any other on the internet nowadays; what's stopping anybody from bullshitting Nexon into letting them try out unreleased content? While we don't know who all of the MWLB members are, do you really think they all want to spend hours searching for hackers? They're not getting paid anything; most of them just want to plantain around and feel superior. The same applies to Tespia.
I'm not saying that my application process isn't flawed. In fact, it probably is, and some idiots like the ones who got in the first three rounds would probably get in as well, but at least what happened then shouldn't happen as often anymore (manually choosing them instead than randomly selecting them obviously reduces the amount of idiots who would get in), and NEXON staff should be able to read through the reports without problems. If they only got one or two spam reports every 10-20 actual reports, I think they wouldn't have had problems nor they'd have closed Tespia.

