again, it takes about 5 minutes to trade with someone for a weapon you want. not that there's a compelling reason to really want any of the unlocks, none of them are any more interesting than the standard weapons. there are even sites out there now that ebay-style list 1000's of players with the weapon you may want, and you can do the whole trade automatically online using a steamAPI. it is literally zero effort. yet you compare bf2's method of unlocking guns - i.e. grinding for 100's of hours to rank-up - more 'favourably' to the "farm for hours" (?!?) method in tf2. you're right, it is a bad comparison... bad because you clearly don't understand the tf2 trade system, nor how it is intended to be used.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
I said "wonky," not "wacky." TF2 is "wacky" in a good way, and "wonky" in a bad. Whatever your thoughts, insights and musing on this matter are, I don't think TF2 was changed for the better, and I'm certainly not the only one who left it afterwards but for the occasional match with friends here and there.
If you went the expansion route to get BF2's extra weapons, it's a pretty straightforward path to unlocking them. But with TF2, you can farm for hours and not get what you want, or trade with people you'd rather not...or throw money at the game until your wallet dries up (but at least you'll have your stuff). It's a bad comparison to make, zeek.
"wallet dries up"? i'm pretty sure each weapon cost like 0.60p. again, not that you would ever want or need to buy one. you can trade for any weapon in the game for 1 scrap metal. if you play for an afternoon you will probably have enough for 2-3 scrap metal, minimum. "grind" really isn't an appropriate word to use here.
and as for "i'm certainly not the only one who left it afterwards"... tf2's popularity has skyrocketed, for better or worse, since weapons were introduced. by all accounts the new weapons and cosmetics totally took the free2play, public-game side of tf2 to a whole new level. tf2 is considerably more popular than any counter strike or call of duty game. so this 'mass exodus' you make out seems to be something limited to your own friend circle. tf2's competitive scene is still probably the biggest competitive scene of any current FPS game. and its numbers and huge player community/economy in the public side of things really speaks for itself.