There are 17 comments in this thread as of this writing, half of which are me ranting about it and a bunch of others being people unhelpfully telling a concerned parent to google what it’s about if they don’t know why Roblox is bad.
As far as I can tell his has increased awareness by one person. That is much, much less than 0.01%.
If you want awareness of the people that matter you want to get to the mianstream press, who have way more reach than Change.org, particularly with that demographic.
Once again, this is very ineffectual on all stated goals. Whehter that’s by design or through incompetence I can’t tell.
By design in that, as I said above, this doesn’t seem like a serious attempt to generate any change but rather a bit of a tantrum from users that don’t necessarily want meaningful changes to the crap Roblox does.
Think more Modern Warfare 2 boycott than “EU regulators looking into loot boxes”.
Considering that the whole thing stems from drama stirred by Roblox streamers and youtubers who make a living from Roblox itself I’m not feeling particularly tinfoily.
Look, I know big numbers are hard and human brains don’t want to parse them, but come on.
You’re talking about an article on Dexerto, a medium that I’m sure has done great work between its founding and my just realizing they exist right now. There are a few other articles online, most in smaller sites or in aggregators.
You are talking about a massive social-media-meets-gaming-platform the size of Twitter on a good day, orders of magnitude bigger than the reach any of this crap got. This is nothing. It’s a PR stunt from a few youtubers, which I hate that I have now focused on enough to understand.
I agree that it’s designed to drum up attention. Just not that this attention is meant to be effective at anything at all beyond, one suspects, driving viewership, because it sure as hell isn’t targeting anything that may cause any action.
Maybe this is why people don’t pay attention to Roblox despite being as large as Steam. The dissonance is just too large. It sucks, because despite the remarkable trivialization of the issue there should be way more eyeballs on this. Real eyeballs. Eyeballs attached to hands holding pens that can sign proper regulations, or at least scare some knee-jerky intermediaries.
Somehow a thousand assholes with customer support addresses managed to ban half of the smut on Steam, but these people figured out they’d gather a hundred times as many signatures and point them at the one person in the entire planet guaranteed to ignore them.
I am tired. I don’t want to think about this anymore.
There are 17 comments in this thread as of this writing, half of which are me ranting about it and a bunch of others being people unhelpfully telling a concerned parent to google what it’s about if they don’t know why Roblox is bad.
As far as I can tell his has increased awareness by one person. That is much, much less than 0.01%.
If you want awareness of the people that matter you want to get to the mianstream press, who have way more reach than Change.org, particularly with that demographic.
Once again, this is very ineffectual on all stated goals. Whehter that’s by design or through incompetence I can’t tell.
By design? Man I need me some of that tinfoil…
By design in that, as I said above, this doesn’t seem like a serious attempt to generate any change but rather a bit of a tantrum from users that don’t necessarily want meaningful changes to the crap Roblox does.
Think more Modern Warfare 2 boycott than “EU regulators looking into loot boxes”.
Considering that the whole thing stems from drama stirred by Roblox streamers and youtubers who make a living from Roblox itself I’m not feeling particularly tinfoily.
The design was to stir up negative press
And by the fact that there was an article posted about it within a day of the petition starting, I’d say it was pretty successful
No, it wasn’t.
Look, I know big numbers are hard and human brains don’t want to parse them, but come on.
You’re talking about an article on Dexerto, a medium that I’m sure has done great work between its founding and my just realizing they exist right now. There are a few other articles online, most in smaller sites or in aggregators.
You are talking about a massive social-media-meets-gaming-platform the size of Twitter on a good day, orders of magnitude bigger than the reach any of this crap got. This is nothing. It’s a PR stunt from a few youtubers, which I hate that I have now focused on enough to understand.
I agree that it’s designed to drum up attention. Just not that this attention is meant to be effective at anything at all beyond, one suspects, driving viewership, because it sure as hell isn’t targeting anything that may cause any action.
Maybe this is why people don’t pay attention to Roblox despite being as large as Steam. The dissonance is just too large. It sucks, because despite the remarkable trivialization of the issue there should be way more eyeballs on this. Real eyeballs. Eyeballs attached to hands holding pens that can sign proper regulations, or at least scare some knee-jerky intermediaries.
Somehow a thousand assholes with customer support addresses managed to ban half of the smut on Steam, but these people figured out they’d gather a hundred times as many signatures and point them at the one person in the entire planet guaranteed to ignore them.
I am tired. I don’t want to think about this anymore.