I have to agree with Xant, I don't see the problem with it, you now have a chance to try everything out WITHOUT having to buy it with your real money, you just play the module. Why you guys seem to think this renting business has anything to do with the final game is beyond me.
Because I don't trust the man. He said many different things over last two years and a half. This attitude is what worries me:
Seems a pretty fair trade off - especially for a ship that others have contributed $110 for the right to fly the same ship in the PU and AC.
You need to understand that he made the first money on basis of making B2P game without microtransactions. He didn't mention them at that time, he didn't dare because he would get nothing. Selling ship packages was supposed to be Kickstarter exclusive, especially selling limited ships and those with unlimited insurance. He broke that promise couple times. Simply put, based on his actions since the first crowdfunding campaign for Star Citizen (Kickstarter), Chris Roberts is not a trustworthy person.
Now he's playing the card where he basically say that people who pay more should be above of those who don't (which does make sense) but he's saying that after two years of trying to sell idea of pledging for ships and not buying them. Even though, in reality he is selling virtual ships. That is what he did so far. Also this:
Don't forget that these contributions are what is allowing us to build a game with the unparalleled ambition of Star Citizen - no other crowd funded game comes even remotely close - by the time we're done you'll be playing a game that will have well over $100M sunk just into its development costs, including a single player component Squadron 42, that will have more play time and quality than most retail AAA first person action games.
are just words. No results so far. He claimed some form of persistent universe will be done before 2015, yet all we have is hangar and small scale arena multiplayer with fighters on two maps and some lame racing mode (Superman 64).
What REC allows us to do is give people that haven't got got the same financial resources to contribute another way in our quest to make Star Citizen the BDSSE by giving us their time to help test, balance the game and then reward them with ability to try out ships and weapons that they would otherwise have to wait until the game is finished to be able to fly.
He said credits will arrive soon after first playable version gets out and all of a sudden he says how playing alpha was always supposed to be only for those who spend real money! How can anyone trust him that won't be the same for final version?