On Feb. 26, Capcom's Neidel «Haunts» Crisan revealed that Street Fighter
V rage quitter's were going to get punished, but he didn't give specifics.
Not exact matches
Guile was announced earlier this month as part of Street Fighter
V's April update, which will also add a punishment for
rage -
quitters by banning them from matchmaking.
Capcom
has confirmed plans to implement a means of punishing
rage -
quitters in Street Fighter
V.
Capcom
has confirmed that it will be rolling out a more substantial means of punishing Street Fighter
V rage -
quitters as part of...
According Harada, the company
has plans to deal with
rage -
quitters but couldn't go further into details regarding it.
The other neat thing in this update is that Capcom
has found a satisfactory way to deal with
rage quitters.
Yes — it
would tank as
rage quitters would ruin every fight requiring a party and the small audience that
would love the challenge couldn't support such a huge endeavor.
Regretfully, the title doesn't allow for any type of online play, which might
have been rewarding - despite the prospect of
rage -
quitters.
An exact release date for Guile
has yet to been announced, but we know he's headed to the game alongside improvements to matchmaking, the way the game handles
rage quitters, and a new stage.
Worse still, I
had more options than I knew what to do with, like Capcom pledging to punish Street Fighter
V rage -
quitters hard, or Dontnod Entertainment revealing the first screenshots of its next game, Vampyr.
Before, Capcom
has encouraged Street Fighter
V players to name and shame
rage quitters on their own, but the company
has announced today via Capcom Unity that it
has begun directly punishing bad sportsmanship, by tracking a player's rates of disconnect versus their win ratio and docking in - game points from their account.
The fighting game publisher
has begun rolling out changes to its online system to dock serial
rage quitters.
This update also promises an official new system for dealing with
rage quitters, something Capcom
has addressed through more ad hoc means up until now.