ORIGINAL: Arjuna
Just as you mentioned that you may buy COTA when you have the time ( and I suspect the state ) to learn about a new battle, I reckon most hold off because they are reluctant to embrace something new. To do so requires a certain frame of mind, a willingness to be challenged, a desire to explore and a preparedness to be patient. We all lead busy lives and seemingly more and more stressful. The prospect of an adventure is not always appealing and so we opt for the tried and true rather than seek out something new.
There is also a reluctance to challenge ones own perceptions and framework. By my age ( which my 17 year old daughter assures me is definitely middle age and some more [;)] ) we tend to have well established frameworks. It requires tremendous courage to challenge these. But it is only by continually doing so that we continue to grow personally. ( Oops...starting to digress here. [:)] )
Your recommendation about a survey is good idea. The trouble is getting customers to complete these. One option is to include a button on the Command Set that takes you to a website to fill in the survey. But how many people would actually fill it in. I suspect that most will eschew doing so for the same reasons they eschew making posts on the forum. We could make it a one-off requirement prior to gaining access to the Game. But how many people would be in favour of that?
I couldn't agree more. I made the leap to real time continiuous games a long time ago with Age of Empires. I have played many since, while wading through the undesireable click-fest types to find the ones that allowed me to give orders while paused to allow for some semblence of strategy. I have tried many, many times to get my old wargaming buddies interested in this type of game mechanic. I have had little success. I marvel at their intransigent refusal to learn new tricks even in the face of my constant lauding of the the virtues of the genre.
If by "one-off" requirement you are alluding to forcing new customers to fill out a survey to get access to the game I am strongly against it. Any mechanism that would make me a slave to some one else's needs and force an interrupting activity upon me causing me to waste my limited gaming time in order to able to game would leave a very, very bad taste in my mouth. I would probably swear never to purchase another product from a company that did that to me. It reminds me of the distastefu practices of some software peddlers in the past whose software installs took over my computer and installed all kinds of things I never wanted or asked for such as the AOL links in browsers and program menus that used to result from the installation of Creative Sound Blaster drivers or the many "extras" automatically installed by games from the old Sierra company. At least new generations of games prompt me to confirm my desire, or lack thereof, to install Gamespy and other similar programs. Software that takes control away from the user and forces a possibly unwanted activity upon them is not a good way to go IMHO.