Among a vocal minority, sure - but a large portion of the DF fanbase was just as enthusiastic about those games (and ultimately disappointed, for example, in towns, not because it copied stuff from Dwarf Fortress but because it simply wasn't good enough).\
Game's that copy another game, but do it better are often quickly forgiven by the majority of the fanbase for copying at all, since it means they can now do what they did before in a way that's even more fun. It's when a game copies, and overpromises, and copies POORLY that you get a huge deal made.
Indeed. The DF forums had at least a decent following for Infiniminer back in the day; that didn't stop us appreciating Minecraft when it came along.
Ignoring all the out-of-game problems (scummy devs, blatant lying, etc.) with The War Z, there's still the in-game fact that
it's worse than DayZ.
* Its graphics are shoddy - models not loading, reflections being incorrect, low-quality environments. ARMA II was hardly eye-candy, but it was still higher-quality than this.
* Its gameplay is equally bad - concentrated spawn points leading to spawncamping, extremely difficult new player experience, 4-hour respawn times. God help you if you don't have a team of 'allies' to help you clear a building in order to loot a weapon.
* It has a heavy reliance on P2W microtransactions - real money buys food/drink/bandages to negate the survival aspect, melee weapons, ammunition, and also negates the 4-hour respawn times. If you don't spend real money, you start with nothing more deadly than a flashlight, and you'll be scrounging for every last bullet. If you
do spend real money, you're a near-invincible behemoth with easy access to awesome melee weapons, infinite ammunition for the game's most powerful guns, and unlimited food, drink, and health without ever having to put yourself in danger to scout the ruins.
This, to me, sounds like the
very definition of a terrible game. Sergey keeps bragging about being the top-selling game on Steam... except his sales were based on a dearth of other popular games being released at the time, and complete fabrications in the advertising material on the Steam page. I'm willing to bet that, right now, with the Holiday Sale on, The War Z wouldn't sell more than a couple dozen copies.