Indie developer Petter Malmehed released his unconventional alternate reality puzzle game After Hours in 2018, and according to Malmehed himself, it did alright, even if it wasn’t a big commercial success. However, in recent months and years, he’s seen its user reviews on Steam gradually decline at the same time as its completion rate is steadily dropping, and he thinks he knows why.
"The reviews got lower and lower": Dev says his puzzle game is suffering on Steam because young people "don't know how to write emails anymore"
Submitted 3 days ago by cm0002@lemmings.world to gaming@lemmy.zip
jqubed@lemmy.world 3 days ago
jeff@lemmy.zip 3 days ago
Lol this is just tragic. How would these people write a letter, even just to out in their neighbour’s letterbox regarding a burglary or something? Do people not think that they need to write a brief title?
Starski@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
I mean, I personally was never taught to put a subject while writing a letter, only for emails. I figure if it’s important enough to be put in a letter you should just read the whole thing, and the first couple lines should Include the reason for sending a letter anyways. Aside from that I haven’t written a letter in over a decade, and have only written about 5 emails. Any communication I do in person, over text, or over call, with an emphasis on in person. On top of the notion that I wouldn’t ever write a letter to one of my neighbors, let alone interact with them in general. If I saw one of them getting burgled, I’d call the police and then mind my own business. So to answer your question, “these people” wouldn’t write a letter to their neighbor, most people don’t really do that anymore.
IronBird@lemmy.world 3 days ago
when i write letters i dont include any “dear X” or whatever, the recipient knows who it’s for/from because it’s addressed to them and has a sender address
jqubed@lemmy.world 2 days ago
For physical letters I only put a subject on business correspondence, but that’s not something I expect kids to be familiar with