Steven Hundt:mad:

Moderators: Joel Billings, Tankerace, siRkid
Control yourself, you'll spurt. Matrix decided to put the player manual on the CD in order to avoid the expense not only of printing the manual but of shipping it in the bigger box that would have been necessary. It's all there. A cheap, easy way to get it printed is to copy-and-paste the manual to a floppy and take it to Kinko's or some such place to get it printed. Some guys on these forums have taken the file to work and printed it at their employer's expense (obviously, you want to make sure not to get into trouble with your boss).Originally posted by sdhundt
This is a good game but what a RIP-OFF !!!! A game that costs $49 should have a **** rule book with the game. I found out after I bought the game that the rules were on the disk. Well that is BULL-**** !!!! With rules that are over 100 pages long most people read the rules away from the PC then play the game. It would have been nice to take the rules out of the house to read them when I had time. I shouldn't have to print up a 100+ page rule book. Does anyone else feel this way ?
Steven Hundt:mad:![]()
Yah, and you're right, pal. Just like backdoor women, we gotta pay 'em, but we gotta make 'em toe the line, too. Matrix/2-by-3: We want ya, but ya gotta put out on demand the way we wants it.Originally posted by Badger
Well said pasternakski!
I would have gladly paid another $20 to have printed manual with the game (hell, I probably would have paid $20 more for the game even without a manual, but dont let Matrix know that), but I know a lot of people would have been scared off with a $70 price tag. When a company like Matrix makes a great game like UV, we all need to do everything we can to make sure games like this continue to be made. Having to print my own manual is a small price to pay for that.
Good game? Heck it's a great game. Try measuring it's value by the hours of great entertainment you'll get. By my count I paid somewhere about 10 cents an hour. You want to call that a rip-off? By the time WITP comes out, I'll bet it will be about 2 cents an hour.Originally posted by sdhundt
This is a good game but what a RIP-OFF !!!! A game that costs $49 should have a **** rule book with the game. I found out after I bought the game that the rules were on the disk. Well that is BULL-**** !!!! With rules that are over 100 pages long most people read the rules away from the PC then play the game. It would have been nice to take the rules out of the house to read them when I had time. I shouldn't have to print up a 100+ page rule book. Does anyone else feel this way ?
Steven Hundt:mad:![]()
I had my manual printed at one of the office stores, had them punch 3 holes in the pages and bought a 3-ring binder all for less than $10. With that said... I've used the online manual 95% of the time BECAUSE of the ability to do the search function that is in the online manual. Instead of me looking, and looking in the manual for something. Just bring up the search function, type a few keywords, and ta-da.Originally posted by Point Luck
I also agree with Pasternakski
Having the manual on the CD is far less a handicap than not having a quality product. I printed the manaul out as soon as I got the game. I used the ALt-Tab method until I understood the game. and using the search feature off the CD made looking for specific information much easier than reading through the whole manual.
Well said. It would be nice if things were different, but the truth is that serious, thoughful, turn-based wargames are simply not going to be coming from the major companies anymore. And it is also true that manufacturing a printed manual for a software program of any complexity is typically the largest single assembly-time expense of such software products by far (both the CD-ROM and the box are relatively cheap to manufacture).Originally posted by Swamp_Yankee
Bottom line is that we're such a small market, we have to accept things like printing out our own manuals.