I could go on. TLDR: they could have concentrated on getting a single player game out the door and if they had scaled back their ambitions and "fidelity" they might have done it.
I might even had played it back in 2014/2015 to get my aging rig to its knees. And then moved on to PlayStation for some real SP games.
(As I did in 2016, just without Squadron 42 in-between.)
But Chris is incompetent, he gets fixated on meaningless and technically complex additions to the visuals and seems unable to focus on making anything other than the next tech demo and seems more interested in making and interactive movie than an actual game. For all these reasons they'll never manage it.
I think Chris is an impostor and just got away with it in the early days with no Internet, maybe by buying and reselling or stealing someone else's shit. That "legacy" is what he is banking on and I firmly believe, that does not really exist. That's why it was so important to get Ben "Developer" on board, reassuring Chris everyday, that he really did Wing Commander.
When I watched the live stream with Chris playing his own game (which for me happened to be shortly after watching the video where he pretended debugging the same game), the penny has finally dropped: This guy is a complete computer illiterate and never developed a video game ever in his life. Not in the 1980s and not today. He has not a fucking clue, what he is doing, nor does anybody else of his entourage.
The only thing that changed is that you can't get away with pretending anymore in this day and age. "Fake it till you make it" doesn't work anymore in the connected era within a billion-dollars industry. There are small indie developers who know what they're doing proving wrong his "never been done before" narrative, which might have worked in a 1980s publisher boardroom. And the whole world knows instantly.
The famous psychiatry doctor impostor Gerd Postel stumbled over the same issue: 100 years earlier his stunt might have worked until retirement, but he tried it at the end of the 20th century, when people recognizing him as a mailman were a few hours of a car drive away and not days on horse. So of course, he met somebody by chance and got caught.
That's the magic of the Internet: It will not only debunk Croberts' Star Citizen, but his entire legacy as the big scam it was from the beginning. He built an entire career on pretending.