https://pbs.twimg.com/media/F23hYgaX...jpg&name=small
Printable View
Your missing the biggest time space I said to 7.0. Which adds 395+ more days to 29 patches. Which just has a seasonal release date. Your number is at almost 4.2 months already. We are literally in the same month your roughly second week and I am end week or start of next.
I don't include release dates that we don't know. And 7.0 would be 30th patch, you didn't account for 6.5. I know that it feels like we should be halfway through 6.5 by this time, but we're still just in 6.4.
But if you want to use uncertain release dates, then if 6.5 is scheduled for early october and 7.0 for early summer, then let's use 10.10.2023 for 6.5 and 14.7.2024 (1/4 into the summer) for 7.0, then we would still get to average of ~4.352 months per patch, which is still far from the 5 months as you suggest. This average would climb to your suggested 5 months only if 7.0 released in spring of 2026.
I definitely wouldn't mind some more midcore grinds, with some worthwhile rewards. More mounts, glam, hairs, etc.. I'd like to be able to play at endgame a bit more. Stuff like that would help with patch lulls. There is a balance to be made when it comes to a grind.
It's the way of the English forums. Being insulting, and combatitive is the norm around here.
Reality is that no matter what we say, or suggest, that nothing short of a mass exodus will cause anything to change in regards to the longer patch cycles, and patches containing less content overall.
The problem is, that a mass exodus is not coming for FFXIV. Trying to convince the playerbase to stage a mass exodus I need not say is a futile endeavor. This game, even through its biggest content drought can limp by on casuals who stick around for player generated content, essentially acting as a VR chat alternative. These types of players don't care about content droughts as long as they periodically get new furnishings or event glamours, and with Dawntrail announced, you can expect them to stick around for even longer. It takes a perfect storm to brew up a mass exodus of players from an MMO. Disasterous game-breaking changes, Controversies with key figures involved with the company, or years worth of poorly recieved expansions. Pick two, and have a public figure announce their departure from the game, and you've got the makings of a serious player bleed off.
Yes, FFXIV will bleed players - But never in a capacity to raise any eyebrows. Remember, its not only sub money that keeps this MMO alive, but money also generated through the ingame store and no matter how upset we are on the forums, the casuals who keep this game alive will continue playing, and paying in blissfull ignorance of any real issues around them.