Not a pretty picture - Graphing the Unmitigated Failure of Blogshares
Not a pretty picture - Graphing the Unmitigated Failure of Blogshares:
Active Players - October 7, 2007
Active Players - July 6, 2008
Yep, them is the facts ^ … what a joke.
So much for the “Game Improvement Commission”, eh ? Good job Mr. Smallbone(r). Currently there are on average about 145 or less daily players remaining in the game and that number keeps shrinking. Of those about half are the corrupt core group: the inner circle, the roled players, their friends along with another dozen or more wannabes; and, a handful of happless newbies.
Poor Subbie. He can’t present any evidence to dispute anything I have said so he tries to insult me and bury his head in the muck like almost everyone else who still clings to their delusions about the game. Well, as I said in my previous post and replies to Subwolf:
Blogshares just keeps losing players and that’s a fact. If you ever wonder why that is you might look more deeply at the character of the people in charge. You (Subwolf) and Jay (and even the rest of the whole brown nosed crew) must surely realize by now that any game which constantly loses premium members and active players is a failure and not a success, right ?
The steady and continual shrinkage of the Blogshares customer base is an undeniable fact. By this simple measure Blogshares has become a stunning failure. Lack of customer service skills, abuse of members and corruption will always take such a toll in the end. You were warned. You made bad choices. Now, you all have to live with them.
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Posted on July 6th, 2008 by AXA and filed under AXA, Blogshares, Corporate News, Game Tips, Online Games, ban |


July 6th, 2008 at 4:53 pm
Nothing like watching adults piss and moan over a game.
INTERNET IS SERIOUS BUSINESS GUYS.
August 2nd, 2008 at 5:39 pm
Is Untouchables Blog guilty of the same kind of whitewashing of criticism they claim of Blogshares?
Given how many of my posts have been deleted, I should certainly say so. Ah, how quickly criticism of one system turns into emulation of it.