Founder here also, well I mainly lifeskill and play barbie on the game anyway although I do love the combat its repetitive and puts me to sleep if over 30 min worth, until someone else tops this game in visuals, combat etc I will still be here. I do appreciate all of the quality of life changes through the years though but there is still a lot to improve on in all regards to the game. Instead of adding more content they need to slow down and fix whats broken in the original content first.
Honestly only three things I am excited for going forward.
1. A Dwarf class
2. Mansions
3. Trading
Everything else I suspect will still hold to the pattern we been seeing for the last 5 years, at least until a threatening MMORPG comes along and their playerbase starts to hemorrhage.
THE BEST MMORPG TILL NOW!
This is the first game that i have spend money to buy and I LOVE IT!
I love the pity system and the event rewards ohhh i made a top armor with this and i am enjoyng casual play even that i cant pvp with the big boys its still fun to hop in have a chat and do sooo mcuh i mean SOOOOOOOO MUCH
I hope that the future will be even better!
Losing console is of no consequence to PA otherwise they would be working on next gen version so the game doesn't have to cater to PS4/XB1. The hardware bottleneck is why issues like desync, blackscreen's and doom 2s haven't been(and won't be) fixed. There is not a large enough active player base and the large portion of those active players who don't buy pearls.
Black desert PC does very well in Asia and has to be by far their biggest money maker, Black desert console was released to sell copies of the game, not be a mirror of PC. They would've known long before release that game stability was going to be an issue and they done it anyway, they don't care about posts like this that are a witch hunt disguised feedback, it adds to a pile of negative perception which ensures the continuation of the current budget and bare-bones dev team who works on console.
Also, stop aiming your hate at the dev's, their job is to write code, not to decide how a company's resources are allocated.