Edited By
Clara Evers
A growing number of gamers are expressing concerns over the potential requirement of a Bethesda account to access DOOM: The Dark Ages, similar to issues faced in DOOM Eternal. This worry stems from locked single-player features in previous titles that sparked intense debate among players.
Previously, DOOM Eternal mandated a Bethesda account for nearly every aspect of gameplay, even in single-player mode. While some users accepted a login requirement for multiplayer, many questioned the decision to lock campaign access behind an account. Commenters are hopeful that the new title will not replicate this controversy.
Discussion among users reveals a mix of apprehension and annoyance. Here are three main themes surfacing from the comments:
Uncertain Account Requirements: Users speculate whether account restrictions will continue in the new title. "They did it in Eternal, so I donโt see why they wonโt require it again," one user expressed.
Gameplay Impact: Some believe that login mandates lessen the gaming experience. "The game is entirely playable without stats, skins, and reward programs," noted another commenter.
Corporate Practices: Thereโs frustration over perceived corporate control. "Big companies canโt release games without retention and microtransactions, unfortunately," a user stated.
The sentiment ranges from cautious optimism to outright skepticism. As one commenter pointed out, "We donโt know yet, though. Anything can happen."
"Stats, skins, rewards etc., are still stored on Bethesda's servers. So login requirement is unavoidable," another user confirmed, leaning toward accepting the login culture in gaming.
๐ Majority of comments share concern over account login implementations.
๐ก Previous game success does not guarantee similar decisions for future titles.
โ ๏ธ Corporate influence could shape gameplay experiences in the new DOOM.
As the gaming community awaits further news from Bethesda, questions linger over how this will impact fan engagement and the overall reception of DOOM: The Dark Ages. Will Bethesda listen to the feedback, or will it stay the course with its account strategy? Only time will tell.