• Sat. Oct 26th, 2024

Disney Dreamlight Valley fans unhappy Wall-E pack costs too much Mon-E

Byadmin

Jun 8, 2023



The latest update for Disney Dreamlight Valley is its biggest story update yet, but not all players are happy with every part of the new content on offer, or the prices for some of it.The Remembering update is live now for Disney Dreamlight Valley with new story content, a new Star Path, the game’s first paid Dream Bundle, and more. Yet while some are enjoying the new character and story content, not all players are content with everything: specifically, the pricing for the Moonstones needed to buy extra content, as well as what’s included with the new Star Path.Disney Dreamlight Valley’s Dream Bundle costs a lot of MoonstonesThe Remembering update brought with it the first Disney Dreamlight Valley Dream Bundle. It includes a new Dream Style for Wall-E, a new questline, new dialogue options for Wall-E, and a few outfits. The bundle currently costs 4,000 Moonstones. Based on the fact that a Big Moonstone Pack of 5,500 Moonstones costs $19.99/£17.99, some players seem to be questioning whether the bundle includes enough content for its price. You can earn Moonstones in-game, but it’d likely take a while to earn that many. Moonstone pricing has already met with pushback from Disney Dreamlight Valley players, and this Dream Bundle has too, although there is currently a contest where you could win one of 15 bundles.Over on the Dreamlight Valley subreddit, one player posted that Wall-E’s quest was “nowhere near worth 4,000 Moonstones,” adding, “They need to get it together when it comes to pricing. Don’t even get me started on the shop prices they spew out regularly.” Another post had one player worrying, “I don’t want to know how much characters will cost if this” (4,000 Moonstones) “is for a quest, two outfits, and a dreamstyle…” Another wrote that they’d need to spend around $30AUD for the Big Moonstone Pack to afford the new Wall-E content, adding, “That’s a whole season pass for some games. Hell, the Burning Shores DLC for Horizon Forbidden West was $30. And I think we can all agree you’re getting much more bang for your buck with that then you are with these premium store items.” Another post asked for opinions on having quests behind paywalls, with one comment stating, “I’m definitely not handing over 4,000 moonstones for a quest that has no ties to the main story that then makes Wall-E look cute in a suit.” The comments on these posts mostly seem to agree with that sentiment.Some players also seem a little disappointed with the new Star Path, suggesting that there are too many motifs, including in the Premium part (which you unlock with 2,500 Moonstones), rather than other outfits or items for decoration. “Well the new Star Path is… disappointing,” one player says. “Isn’t it?! No big decorations, not any character outfits… (Also the Wall-E bundle — and this bundle idea in general — is such a money-grabbing strategy… I’m sad).” Another says, “Can we stop filling up the star paths with insane amounts of motifs, there’s nine furniture items and 16 motifs! Why?”Speculation about the pricing for paid content in Disney Dreamlight Valley (which will be free-to-play when it launches in full) has been rife for some time within its player community. Gameloft long ago emphasized that Disney Dreamlight Valley microtransactions won’t be “pay-to-win” but that it had future plans for paid content which would “add significant content to the game.”The free content with the new update, meanwhile, adds the Fairy Godmother with new story content for The Forgetting, free rewards on the Star Path, decorating updates for the Touch of Magic tool, an update to Scrooge’s store, and more.What do you make of Disney Dreamlight Valley’s pricing system?



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