Not at the time I played (earlier this year), it was either "In-game currency for an inflated price" or "Our Cashshop currency for a very cheap price."
They didn't fail due to the subscription fee -- they failed by showing the lack of capacity to back it up -- a capacity that SE has proven with FFXI despite popular belief seeing as it's a successful FF time and financially successful.And the major difference between Guild Wars 2, and the other games is the fact that the model STARTS free to play bypassing the whole concern for the 'rise to folp' issue on companies who built the game reliant on subscriptions. (Yet failed even with the budget you think made these games better.)
Silkroad:R is doing better than FFXIV, we all know how badly XIV suffered due to it's launch and rushed nature, so it's kind of pointless to say an MMO is doing better than XIV when we all know of XIV's circumstances.So yes, we've been here before. They're doing better than FFXIV
If sub numbers is the only mark for success in your opinion, no it won't survive -- however a game that's fun to play and makes the company money? It will survive just like FFXI, did you happen to catch the recent report about how it made them a very large amount of money even with "low sub" numbers?Do you think FFXIV will survive as a subscription model when games with superior numbers to FFXI are switching over?
Showing ignorance would be stating that P2P doesn't work and F2P is the real key to success, wouldn't it? You're only looking at one side when I can look at both sides and see that F2P isn't the magical fix you're making it out to be.This sort of revival is the greatest challenge any company in this genre has ever had. You're going to have to sallow the fact that F2P is possible in this game's future if it doesn't have a monumental success. You can disagree on whether or not it will be better for the game overall - or the direction the genre is taking. But trying to embrace inane catchphrases of aged and outdated wisdom as your impenetrable shield is just willful ignorance.