O
onthefifty
Guest
was in the train station going home yesterday. had a few min before my train came in so i went to the news stand and picked up a pc gamer mag.
they had an article on lineage celebrating its 4 year anniversary. i didn't read the article as i could give two hoots about lineage but the point is, i've been making an effort to brouse through the mag's every month looking for any articles on uo. we just had the 10 year anniversary and i don't think i saw 1 publication do an article on it. I don't understand why this is so.
They had articles on different events in wow. Nothing on our event. The only time i see uo mentioned is when they reference Sir Richard who was the founder of UO.
Than I see the JWilson slimes running around and understand JWilson gave UO a bad review. Reporters are typically a hater group of people and I wonder if they have sort of blackballed us. That or the fact that since EA
never buys ad space for UO in these pubs, the magazines don't write about it, rather choosing to do stories on games that pay for advertising, sort of like knowing which side your bread is buttered on.
any thoughts on this matter?
they had an article on lineage celebrating its 4 year anniversary. i didn't read the article as i could give two hoots about lineage but the point is, i've been making an effort to brouse through the mag's every month looking for any articles on uo. we just had the 10 year anniversary and i don't think i saw 1 publication do an article on it. I don't understand why this is so.
They had articles on different events in wow. Nothing on our event. The only time i see uo mentioned is when they reference Sir Richard who was the founder of UO.
Than I see the JWilson slimes running around and understand JWilson gave UO a bad review. Reporters are typically a hater group of people and I wonder if they have sort of blackballed us. That or the fact that since EA
never buys ad space for UO in these pubs, the magazines don't write about it, rather choosing to do stories on games that pay for advertising, sort of like knowing which side your bread is buttered on.
any thoughts on this matter?