Don wrote:There are people who said WoW was not ready and needed more polish and that is clearly wrong. People who say that are just guys who wanted to play WoW for free for longer (WoW is essentially unchanged at the group level between beta and release). So the question is who are you supposed to listen to?
See, here's the problem. If you advertise your "beta" as a free demo, then it's a free demo. Instead, tell your beta testers that if they're not going to test the game and submit bug reports, then they can STFU/GTFO and use the slot for somebody who's actually going to test.
You HAVE to have a group of (relatively) unbiased testers that haven't had 5 years buried in the game already. They can tell you if something is out of whack with the balance, or that bugs with the interface.
Even with good development houses like Turbine, I'm still puzzled at the type of things that go through the patch like normal, even though the beta testers of the patch are screaming that some glaring bugs need to be fixed. For example, there was a major delay with the Riddle skill, and people saw it in the beta server. Many people reported the bug, but the patch went through anyway. So, now, a skill that was fine is now bugged, despite the fact that the company knew it was a problem. Instead, fix the problem, then submit the patch. Also, there have been a few Book patches (major patches with new areas) where they have to spend a lot of hours on the production server to fix rubberbanding issues. Why wasn't this caught on the beta server, which was designed for this sort of thing?