2012-02-29, 04:05 PM
I respect his response, because it's true.
If he was no longer ''in it'' I'm glad he decided to end it, otherwise it would start to show in the game itself that he wasn't caring for the project anymore. It's how Minecraft was when Notch was behind the wheel: He would just laze around, update when he felt like it, doing just whatever he felt like doing in those updates, etc.
Also, like I was telling my fiance, if he passed the game off to another company then THEY would put THEIR influence into the game, and often times that is a very bad thing, especially for a game that has ''its own style'' like Terraria.
I'm perfectly happy with his honest response, especially because I pretty much knew all of this before he made that post. I respect him, and I can understand where he's coming from.
Anyone who still doesn't understand where he's coming from can't understand in my opinion. It's much deeper than just, ''herpderp he quit derpderp''. You'd have to be a fool to have that mentality.
I'm looking forward to his next project.
If he was no longer ''in it'' I'm glad he decided to end it, otherwise it would start to show in the game itself that he wasn't caring for the project anymore. It's how Minecraft was when Notch was behind the wheel: He would just laze around, update when he felt like it, doing just whatever he felt like doing in those updates, etc.
Also, like I was telling my fiance, if he passed the game off to another company then THEY would put THEIR influence into the game, and often times that is a very bad thing, especially for a game that has ''its own style'' like Terraria.
I'm perfectly happy with his honest response, especially because I pretty much knew all of this before he made that post. I respect him, and I can understand where he's coming from.
Anyone who still doesn't understand where he's coming from can't understand in my opinion. It's much deeper than just, ''herpderp he quit derpderp''. You'd have to be a fool to have that mentality.
I'm looking forward to his next project.

