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EA: 'We've made plenty of mistakes'

Added: 05.04.2013 22:18 | 8 views | 0 comments


Electronic Arts is again in the running for The Consumerist's "Worst company in America" title for 2013, and while COO Peter Moore thinks EA will "win" this title, he has spoken out to defend his company. In a blog entry titled "We Can Do Better," Moore quoted the famous quip: The tallest trees catch the most wind to defend EA's place in the industry.

From: n4g.com

EA: 'We've made plenty of mistakes'

Added: 05.04.2013 20:04 | 3 views | 0 comments


Chief operating officer Peter Moore says gamers deserve better from publisher, but claims it is not worst company in America.

Electronic Arts is Moore quoted the famous quip: The tallest trees catch the most wind to defend EA's place in the industry.

"Let me cut to the chase: it appears EA is going to 'win.' Like the Yankees, Lakers, and Manchester United, EA is one of those organizations that is defined by both a legacy of success, and a legion of critics," Moore said. "Are we really the 'Worst Company in America?'"

EA in the user-voted tournament's semifinal round.

Moore admitted EA has made "plenty of mistakes," including shutting down game servers too early, shipping .

"We owe gamers better performance than this," Moore said. "Some of these complaints are 100 percent legitimate--like all large companies we are not perfect. But others just don't hold water."

Moore listed off a bevy of such claims, the first of which is related to SimCity's always-online requirement. He said many contend this is a form of digital rights management (DRM), but claimed this is not the case. "We can't be any clearer: it's not. Period," Moore said.

The executive also brought up Origin. He said he's heard the claim that there is no room for Origin as a competitor to Steam, but argued that "45 million registered users are proving that wrong." As for free-to-play and microtransactions, Moore said these business models are not a "pox on gaming" as some are suggesting.

"Tens of millions more are playing and loving those games," Moore said.

Lastly, Moore said in the past year, EA has received "thousands" of emails and physical cards protesting against EA for allowing gamers to create LGBT characters in its games. EA has .

"That last one is particularly telling. If that's what makes us the worst company, bring it on. Because we're not caving on that," Moore said.

Moore ended his note saying EA is "committed to fixing our mistakes," saying the publisher will continue to factor in community feedback when making decisions.

"So here#146;s my response to this poll: We can do better. We will do better," Moore said. "But I am damn proud of this company, the people around the globe who work at EA, the games we create, and the people that play them. The tallest trees catch the most wind. At EA we remain proud and unbowed."

From: www.gamespot.com

PlayStation 3 | Moons chats about his 4th place finish and his Unique UMvC3 Team

Added: 03.04.2013 1:06 | 3 views | 0 comments


Gootecks finds out more about the 4th place finisher at Final Round for Ultimate Marvel vs Capcom 3, Moons.

From: www.gamespot.com

Moons chats about his 4th place finish and his Unique UMvC3 Team

Added: 03.04.2013 1:06 | 3 views | 0 comments


Gootecks finds out more about the 4th place finisher at Final Round for Ultimate Marvel vs Capcom 3, Moons.

From: www.gamespot.com

EA: Demise of console gaming 'very premature'

Added: 01.04.2013 16:17 | 1 views | 0 comments


COO Peter Moore says even though mobile is growing, gamers continue to show enthusiasm for core titles.

The demise of traditional console gaming is not a reality the industry faces, according to Electronic Arts chief operating officer Peter Moore. Speaking with , Moore said even though the mobile space has grown, gamers still want core titles they can play on a big screen.

"The console business is still a core part of our business; it's the majority of our business. The demise of console gaming is very premature as far as we're concerned," Moore said.

"We still have thousands of people focused on developing current-generation Xbox 360 and PS3 games, as well as people focused now on the next generation when that finally arrives," he added. "And so, people still want core games. People want to sit back in their living rooms, take advantage of their HD TVs, and and play fully immersive games like []."

Also during the interview, Moore said he expects EA's digital sales--which includes mobile, downloadable content, and subscriptions--to possibly overtake its traditional packaged goods business by 2015.

"In two years we could be looking at the tipping point where digital becomes bigger than the traditional core,#148; Moore said.

Moore is in "tremendous shape." Moore said one thing the new EA CEO needs to do is execute.

"We did not executive to the level that we needed to in [fiscal year 2013] and [John Riccitiello] took accountability for that. And I think the future CEO will focus on pure execution because all the ingredients are there; we have the world's best developers, we have a tremendous publishing pipeline, and we've made the hard decisions about our platform.

From: www.gamespot.com

EA: Demise of console gaming 'very premature'

Added: 01.04.2013 16:17 | 0 views | 0 comments


COO Peter Moore says even though mobile is growing, gamers continue to show enthusiasm for core titles.

The demise of traditional console gaming is not a reality the industry faces, according to Electronic Arts chief operating officer Peter Moore. Speaking with , Moore said even though the mobile space has grown, gamers still want core titles they can play on a big screen.

"The console business is still a core part of our business; it's the majority of our business. The demise of console gaming is very premature as far as we're concerned," Moore said.

"We still have thousands of people focused on developing current-generation Xbox 360 and PS3 games, as well as people focused now on the next generation when that finally arrives," he added. "And so, people still want core games. People want to sit back in their living rooms, take advantage of their HD TVs, and and play fully immersive games like []."

Also during the interview, Moore said he expects EA's digital sales--which includes mobile, downloadable content, and subscriptions--to possibly overtake its traditional packaged goods business by 2015.

"In two years we could be looking at the tipping point where digital becomes bigger than the traditional core,#148; Moore said.

Moore is in "tremendous shape." Moore said one thing the new EA CEO needs to do is execute.

"We did not executive to the level that we needed to in [fiscal year 2013] and [John Riccitiello] took accountability for that. And I think the future CEO will focus on pure execution because all the ingredients are there; we have the world's best developers, we have a tremendous publishing pipeline, and we've made the hard decisions about our platform.

From: www.gamespot.com


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