Don't you speak corporate by now? As someone who worked PR for the better part of two decades, I can tell you, the above is just an empty statement. It's geared at making the audience show how much they care without really committing to anything. Fat chance that EA listens to a petition on mod tools. It's not that a real s*** storm, such as the ME3 ending, would errupt over something like that. It's also that there's a lot of empty space left in this game that will be filled with outfit- and equipment DLCs. So modders are the competition even at the most basic level. Your assessment of the situation is - of course - correct. But we should put up a fight anyway, because to be honest, we don't have much to loose here. A Mod Kit will come if EA thinks it makes sense financially. We have to show them that there is more to gain when you provide such tools and if there is enough demand in their support channel, which is the official way of communicating change requests, it might catch on with the press as well. I cannot enough draw the conclusion between Skyrim and ME:A. If we can sell them the idea that ME:A could become the Skyrim of Science Fiction. Bethesda counts on the modding community, that is why the game still sells at a high price point even six years after it's release. EA sees that toop AND people buy their DLCs because they are used as Resources for Mods. If this goes through their thick heads they might listen because EA Execs look in fact over to Bethesda and envy their success. They can read sales tables. The way the EA Answer HQ works is that from time to time the moderators will present the Execs and Devs with a list of hot topics that are discussed in the Forum. There need to be modding as top priority in EVERY fu++++++ report to them. Let's be honest, telling them what you want in one or two sentences or just leaving a "thumbs up" is literally the least thing you can do. First, they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. .... and then you win.