They should make the April Fools ultimate lines permanent by making them a very rare occurrence. It should be something like a 0.5% chance of heroes saying their April Fools ultimate lines when you press Q.
@pcgamer He's right. The incentive for publicly traded companies is to maximize shareholder value, not to create great games. This is how we ended up in microtransaction hell. Shift the incentive to creating a great product and microtransactions start to take a back seat to great gameplay
@JoshElstro@pcgamer Generally it does, but the problem here is the incentive is to maximize shareholder value and not create a great product. If a great product were the incentive then that statement would be true. Games have become microtransaction hell because of stock incentives.
@HeelBit@FLAlejandro0 The real reason is that living somewhere is a for profit venture. It didn't used to be so housing prices were reasonable. As soon as housing was opened up to investors, everything got bought up and now there's a "housing crisis"
@octocron@TheNooticer@pcgamer That's not the logic. More people being more productive leads to more value delivered and more profit secured. Businesses don't say no to more money coming in the door.
@octocron@TheNooticer@pcgamer There's examples all over of this happening. Productivity is at an all time high right now and more people are employed than ever.
@slama_will@BaseOwl @SimplyNexy @jasonschreier I'm sorry. You're right. Executive's should for themselves and companies should just go under so that everyone is jobless rather than a few people.
It's amazing that I'm agreeing with you and you're still arguing with me. Twitter in a nutshell.