Andre Yoskowitz
30 Apr 2012 20:38
Crysis developer's director of creative development Rasmus Hojengaard has backtracked from his infamous comments made last week.
At the time, the exec said he was all for the gaming industry moving towards blocking used games, as it would be "awesome" from a business perspective.
Today, in an interview with CVG, the exec did a complete about-face:
"My comment made in the interview released on the 24th of April, touching upon 'blocking sales of used games,' was not intended to be taken seriously nor representative of the opinion of Crytek."
Original post:
Over the past few months, it has been rumored that the upcoming generation of consoles from Sony and Microsoft will block used games from playing, a move that would kill the entire second market and likely bankrupt retail companies like GameStop.
Rasmus Hojengaard, the director of creative development at Crytek, seems to feel that rumor should become fact: "From a business perspective that would be absolutely awesome. It's weird that [second-hand] are still allowed because it doesn't work like that in any other software industries, so it would be great if they could somehow fix that issue as well."
If not completely banned, the exec appears to at least want the used game sales truncated.
"The worst thing that can happen is they [console makers] make something that's very complex for developers, regardless of how awesome it might theoretically be. So getting hardware that allows you to quickly get prototypes up and running, and any kind of scalability they can offer will be great as well, as long as everyone has that scalability and not just a select few."