3 Years of Waiting, Near Zero Progress: When Will the Promises Be Kept?
Imagine I’m a movie director, and I create a fantastic film that captures the hearts of millions. After everyone has seen it, I tease a sequel, promising it will be released soon. Time passes—one year, then two, then three—and still, no sequel. What do you think would happen? The audience that loved the first movie would begin to lose faith in my promises. They’d start doubting me, growing frustrated and upset. They would feel like I’m not delivering on what I said, because I never gave them a clear timeline or any indication of what’s to come.
Now, let’s look at your situation. You’ve told us that you’re working on major improvements, reworks, and fixes for well-known issues that players have been complaining about for years. Yet, despite saying this for one year, two years—wait, it’s been three!—we’re still waiting for any real change. All we’ve seen are new, expensive mechs, weapons, and pilots—things that aren’t just costly in the game but also in real life. And still, you wonder why we’re frustrated and impatient.
The reason is simple: you’ve given us no concrete updates, no specific timelines, no clarity on what’s coming. Everything is kept in the dark until it’s finally released. We’re not asking for perfection, but at least some transparency and a little trust. Without it, we can only wonder if our hopes for these promised improvements are ever going to materialize.
We want to support the game and see it thrive, but it's hard when we're left in the dark with no real communication. Promises of fixes and improvements lose their weight over time when we don't see any action. We don’t mind waiting if we know something is on the way—but when months and years go by without clear progress, it feels like we’re being taken for granted.
It’s not about the new content; it’s about trust. If you're going to make big promises, you need to show us you're serious about delivering. Players have stuck with the game, spent money, and supported it because we believed in what it could be. But now, it feels like the only thing that gets constant attention are flashy new additions that only serve to pull more money from our pockets—rather than addressing the core issues we've been asking about for years.