Original Post — Direct link
This thread is about raids. Lets forget for a moment the missing matchmaking. This early morning before going to work, i have read that some dudes on Twitch took 5 hours to beat the raid. Other dudes spent maybe 10. Before going to work, i took a look at Twitch, and the first on the list i checked were dudes still there trying to beat the raid, still streaming after 18 hrs non stop.

I dont know you, Ubisoft, but im 36, almost 37 and i have a daytime job. I work all day long and i get back home the evening pretty tired. Many people here feel the same. Yes i play games, but for like1-2 hours before going to sleep having to wake up early next morning.

Like i mentioned in the title, do you think we are all useless Twitch streamers or unemployed kids with nothing to do all day long but playing videogames for 5-10-15-20 hours non stop? Why do raids have to take so long to be beaten? Without mentioning that the game still may disconnect you for no reason. I'd be funny to play for 2 hours straight and then get disconnected lol
over 5 years ago - Ubi-RealDude - Direct link
Hey everyone. Along the lines of what others in this thread have mentioned, as game knowledge disseminates around the raid and more players get more adjusted to the recent TU3 update and better gear to boot, the Raid will start to become more easily beaten for all players. By its nature as the most difficult content available, there is going to be some time where completion of the Raid may be somewhat gated. But this will almost certainly not always be the case.

Ultimately I would like to caution patience. The game will evolve as it moves forward, and not beating the raid on release may not necessarily mean it can never be beaten.

Additionally, a reminder that berating, belittling, or mocking other posters for their playstyle/gameplay experience is not only destructive to the conversation, but is also against forum rules. Please treat your fellow players with the same respectfulness and decorum that you would want in return. Thank you.