@Developing
Little extreme there...
They did, it seems, eventually get launched, and it appears they were able fix the most egregious bugs. Time will tell if they got them all.
I just wish they would have avoided the community (and their's, I am sure) frustration, bad PR, and crunch time, stress, and extra hours on their staff, by simply tacking on another week.
Say, instead of trying to launch on Thursday, they had opened up RO to A1/2 testers on Thursday, identified and fixed all the bugs they could, opened RO for the whole community on the following Monday, soft launch on Tuesday, live launch on Wednesday.
Ultimately, it would have fully launched...4 days?...later than it ended up launching, and it would have done so without the stress, they would have looked like champs to the community for doing exactly what they have been asking for, they would have started improving their reputation and professional image, and everyone wins.
Instead, well...
Honestly can't wrap my head around it.
Edit:
Just to preemptively address anyone who might say "I am sure SBS was very confident, or they wouldn't have planned it like they did - unforeseen stuff happens, you know?"...
Yes, unforeseen stuff does happen, thus the extra room in the timeline I presented for the "fudge factor".
However, for the sake of argument, let's assume it was actually perfect. They could have launched as planned on Thursday, not a bug to be found.
Adding that extra week for testing would still have been a brilliant move.
Why, you ask?
Because it would have still demonstrated to the community they were listening to feedback, and doing the extra testing the community wanted.
Then, if everything was perfect, they could breeze through the testing phases a bit faster, looking like rockstars, and then, gasp, launched early!
Man, how might the community have reacted to that, eh?
What better way to roll into the State of Elyria blog post, and the big new year of testing, demonstrating how they have changed and improved?
I know I would have praised them.
I would have praised the fuck out of a process like that.