I do not care about devs or their next game
They, on the other hand, probably do care about themselves and their new game (and their money), so acting like a brat because their interests don't align with yours is, to say the least, misguided.
I do care about BB because I still can see potential in it and that potential is going never be utilized and its damn shame. And frygging waste. And that I can not stand. It piss me off.
And this is incredibly
misguided. What potential? What can be done with BB that Overhype either haven't done, or have said they are not going to do?
Mods? I keep seeing mentions of Warhammer mods, LOTR mods, GoT mods, Star Wars mods, My Little Pony mods. Who is going to make them? They need assets, programming (random maps), mechanics... Who is going to dedicate their time to do all the work that is required to implement full conversion mods? The answer is no one, and anyone who doesn't realize this is hallucinating.
As hallucinating as the people who bring out Mount and Blade as comparison (yes, there are some). According to steamspy, as unaccurate as it might be, M&B Warband has more than 2,5 million owners, BB hasn't even got 100.000. Is anyone seriously deluded enough to believe that the modding community for BB would be even a tiny fraction of that of a game with 25 times the playerbase?
Making mod tools, specially for a game that wasn't programmed with mods in mind from the beginning, and by a first time programmer no less (imagine how the code of the game must look), would be a sad waste of time in the vain hope that BB will sell half a million copies and they will finally be able to afford the golden plated house they've always wanted. They did their math, and came to the conclusion that it wasn't worth their money (and yes, time, for a developer, is money) when they could instead start working on another game, which
will bring them money.
They're german for Pete's sake, if I trust them on anything, is in knowing how businesses work.
A lot of new indie developers have fallen down the hole of financial disaster, and they don't seem keen on taking risks. If you don't care about them or the future of Overhype, you are free to disagree, but insulting them or
insinuating flat out saying that they are "abandoning" or "letting die" a perfectly bug-free game whose developement has simply been completed sounds like throwing a tantrum because someone else is not risking their money on a fool's errand.
I laughed my ass off when game "journalists" came out en masse with articles about "gamer entitlement" during the ME3 debacle. In retrospect, and after seeing what some people will do to an indie developer that has the gull of not doing exactly what they want and demand from them, including but not limited to bombing their reviews, I'm still laughing, because the victim of that was Bioware after all, but it's not so funny when you see it happen to decent people that you like.
Battle Brothers could be so much more. It could have been the game to end all games, after which every other developer just gives up because they are never going to make something quite like it. Overhype could have spent the rest of their lives working on it, adding content and mechanics, and I personally would have loved that to happen. The game could have sold 5 million copies and some revolutionary mods that keep it alive for decades could have been made. And I could have a couple million euros in my bank account, a harem of chilean supermodels and the respect of the people around me. Alas none of that is happening.
Instead we got a great game (not just good for what it is,
perfect for what it is and in what it does, in my opinion) developed by humans who, like you and me, have to work for a living, so they try to make money by offering other people some nice games to pass time and forget about the drudgery of real life by dreaming about killing hordes of orks and undead with their band of brothers.
That all they get for it is scorn and derision paints the sad state in which
gamers (that term should die a thousand deaths) have put this industry.