The phenomenon cuts a wide swath. I call it corporate white knighting, but that's just a placeholder until (and if ever) I understand better the psychology of it. You can't criticize the most obvious of deficiencies in products or services without some idiot charging in on his dubious steed.
Yea, bro. I know.
No excuse for that hole in the ether where you live.
Edit: Que, you may want to do something about your link to the FCC report.
Error 404 - Not Found
We're very sorry, but that page doesn't exist or has been moved.
Edit 2: Looks like it's a malformed link:
"https//www.fcc.gov/reports-research/reports/broadband-progress-reports/2016-broadband-progress-report"
Add a colon in the right place, and it works:
https://www.fcc.gov/reports-research/reports/broadband-progress-reports/2016-broadband-progress-reportEdit 3: Believe it or not, I'm one of the people on the deficiency side of those stats. Apparently, the standard now is 25 mbps. I get 20, realistically 16--because I've never seen a download speed greater than 2 megabytes per second.
Quantum Break is coming out, and if you want to have rather than stream the video content, that download alone is a whopping 75 GB, on a console. I don't know how big the game itself will be, but I'm sure it will be in the 20-40GB range. The Division is online-only (no sale for me). Battleborn will be online only (no sale). Both of these games have single-player components. The push to go online full-time is strong in the game industry (though no stronger than my determination to avoid it entirely). Juxtapose that with the broadband woes, and something--somewhere--has got to give.