Well... if you're saying that pretty much every racing game has bots that are different but the same, I agree. I mean, no one ever says, "In (GTR/Enthusia/LFS etc) the bots do this, but in this game, the bots (do something different)."
I am saying that a certain aspect of racing AI, that is claimed unreasonably difficult as an excuse for its absence is proved entirely doable by the fact it has been done...
I dont know how much more clear I can make it than that.
They already have simulated racing real people, because you race real people, years ago.
Thats not simulating racing other people, thats racing other people. And thats only one option, an option thats not available to everyone and not even desireable to everyone.
While you can state what you feel your averagesness of dedication or interest based on your opinion of the fan base, that does not mean that youa re representative of most or all of the fanbase.
I am an average height and weight male, that does not make my preferences indicative of most or all males.
Me saying my opinion is giving insight into an entire fan base you are out of touch with.
I would say I am not at all out of touch with the online gaming community however you certainly seem out of touch with the offline gaming community... to the point you apparently feel they either dont exist or exist in such small numbers as to be negligeable. An assumption I hold to be patently untrue.
How many of the people in the top 50 in the US TT rankings are you friends with? If it isn't at least a couple, then you are not seeing the big picture.
Please clarify what big picture you are speaking of. The picture of people who avidly play a download only demo with no multiplayer ability at all? The elite who are by definition also the minority? I dont get where you are going with that statement.
BTW the very fact that you are (I believe this is what you are eluding to) friends with many of the top 50 TT rankings makes you actually less indicative of the average populace. Most people dont have a large stable of solid competitive friends online to race against and thus often the choice is random online encounters (which can be more painful than bad AI) or offline.
I know when my friends lists is not showing many people online, I will often resort to offline play rather than risk a horrible online experience. Especially in a racing game where one idiot can really ruin a whole race. I know for a fact that I am not the only one who shares that sentiment as quite often messaging the few friends I did have online resulted in no one wanting to do a 3 or 4 person race and no one wanting to bother stocking the rest of the race with pubs thus all of us heading off to the myriad of available races in single player mode.
Unless you know how most of the people that actually play plan on playing GT5 then you are the one adding something useless to the conversation.
Lets see... one of us is assuming that the way he plays and the way his friends play is how pretty much everyone will play and thus is the only way of concern. Also it seems assumed that good online play means there will never be a desire to play offline.
The other is positing that many people still enjoy the modes where you play against AI opponents and or dont have the option of playing online. In fact being specifically a person who still enjoys playing offline as well as online kind of backs that theory up. Even going so far as to note that the single player career mode is still a huge part of the genre, the closest competition features notable work in that area and even GT5 is purported to have put a lot of effort into a career mode.
Sorry... the assumption that because a lot of people do play online at some point, everyone or most play online only thus rendering offline play quality a non issue doesn't make any sense. Especially if you look at the real bigger picture which is to say, not just you and people like you.
So I have to ask, how is it that you know how most people will play? Are you just guessing based on how you are and assuming others must be like you or are you basing your opinion on history of the genre, the current state of the genre and the fact that allt he major players are investing significant time and resources in the single player portinos of their racing games?
I suppose that since you know how most people will play (in a way that makes singplayer of ngligent importance) T10, EA and PD are all making huge misjudgements by investing in creating a solid single player element to the game?