

Parts of the world experiencing desperate poverty often not so coincidentally experience substantial inequality with the folks needing a professional tool not being so different economically from better off areas. Instead, their answer is to cease all development an support immediately. Stopping all new features but still releasing compatibility and security fixes is incredibly common in software when major versions change. They should have a deprecation plan in place for gradually winding down v1. They aren't the first company to have to walk that back a bit with major version releases. But at the end of the day, Affinity was marketed as the answer to subscription bloat. I also have a (quite) expensive Adobe subscription. I've owned all of the Affinity products for quite a while, so I've gotten plenty of value from them. People like to point out that they've owned Affinity products for a long time, and therefore have gotten their value out of them. The bugs that already exist? Those aren't getting taken care of either. That means, if you bought v1 last week, you cannot expect any compatibility support moving forward. They are telling users that v1 is now completely unsupported.

I'm not moaning at them about the price, but I think it's fair to consider what they are actually saying.
