Gearbox CEO breaks radio silence after Colonial Marines launch

Gearbox CEO Randy Pitchford raised his head above cover today, making a few indirect Tweets regarding the controversialAliens: Colonial Marineslaunch. While he didn’t provide an explanation or an apology, he did make it clear that he doesn’t consider himself a liar.

“I’ve always profited from criticism and, thankfully, I have never been in short supply,”he said. “However, insult or threaten me and I want nothing to do with you. Expect block/ban/whatever I can do.”

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One person replied to Pitchford’s pleas by telling him nobody likes a liar. The man who oversawColonial Marinesfired back with a denial, and an assertion of his noble ambitions.

“No one likes to be called a liar, especially if their intent was pure and they always spoke the truth when they spoke it,” he claimed.

The opening area of the Whisper mission, in a small grove.

Sympathetic stuff, if one is indeed inclined toward feeling sympathy for the face of a company very much under harsh scrutiny. Whether or not you believe therumors of Gearbox’s duplicity and shoddy work ethic, the fact remains that Pitchford has alotof explaining to do when he can finally muster the soul to speak more directly.

He doesn’t consider himself a liar, but the basic evidence on display leaves room for few alternative interpretations.

The Divide in the Cosmodrome, where the Guardian was resurrected.

Ifeel lied to.I spoke to PitchfordaboutAliens: Colonial Marines, and he talked to me about the game’s “next generation lighting” and other awesome features. He promised things I never saw, he showed a room full of writers things that would never make it to the final product. At this stage, and after days of silence, it doesn’t matter if Pitchford believed the words coming out of his mouth when he spoke them. That won’t stop those of us he said them to feeling grossly misled.

Personally, I feel embarrassed by the interview I conducted with him. One feels like a chump when they, in their enthusiasm for a game, publishes an optimistic interview with a guy whose words turn out to be little more than ash in the wind. Thanks to this interview, and indeed the entireColonial Marinesdebacle, I’ve gone off the idea of previews entirely. I’m sticking to reviews, so I can have real code and be sure it’s not some chicanery. To use an already overusedAliensquote — it’s the only way to be sure.

A holofoil Ribbontail, as seen in collections.

The road to Hell, as they say, is paved with good intentions. Pitchford could have startedColonial Marineswith a pure ambition in mind, or he could have been scamming from the start. Either way, the sad and sorry result is the same. Either way, nobody from Gearbox came clean about the changes between the promisedAliensand the final version. Either way, Gearbox allowed customers to keep on thinking they’d bought something totally different from what they got.

And the people accusing Randy of lying to them certainly aren’t to blame for that.

The Phoneutria Fera hand cannon, inspired by the Season of the Haunted armor set. It has a unique, galactic glow.

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Mad Maggie opens a supply bin and an item with a symbol indicating infinite ammo appears.

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The Yeartide Apex tex Mechanica SMG with a Holofoil glow.