Hmm... The real rational conclusion probably includes timing and visibility though.
When those preorders were placed, it was in the midst of the game getting a large grass-roots publicity push. Being in the public eye and actively discussed in many online gaming forums makes a game more desirable for many people. But publicity (and public interest) have largely dried up in the months it took for NoA to confirm that the game was coming.
You're saying the very demand that was the
source of all the publicity declined
because that publicity subsided? How exactly is that
rational?
The movement gained the Public's eye only
after it got the game to the #1 spot on Amazon. Meaning the initial pre-orders that got it to the top were made
prior to the publicity. The movement drying up, explains lack of interest of pre-orders made
from the publicity. Not, the initial pre-orders that
created the publicity. Therefore there are two possibilities:
A.) There was a grassroots effort that culminated from legitimate demand that was being unheard.
B.) There was a small, yet very organized minority group whose numbers weren't big enough to warrant a release but who worked together create the false appearance of being in larger in numbers to to warrant the release.
If the demand was legitimate in the first place, a lack of publicity wouldn't make it decline.