• FireTower@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    The fact so much of the games industry has latch to $60 as ‘the price’ for decades is shocking. It’s an unsustainable practice and will increasingly make companies lean more on post launch predatory practices.

    • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      That is a good point.
      On the flip side, they’re not largely selling something that has any physical finiteness to it anymore, and the sales volumes have increased drastically, resulting in significantly higher profits despite a smaller inflation adjusted unit cost.

      The cost of a good decreasing as an industry matures feels right. Jello cost 23¢ a box in 1940. Adjusted for inflation it should cost $5.17 a box now, but it’s only $1.59.
      When there’s 2 games to buy, they can be justifiably more expensive than when there’s a massive surplus.
      The games are different, but it’s not like consumers can’t find a different one they’ll also enjoy if the first one they look at is too expensive.

      Inflation has made $60 less valuable, but they’re not selling to the same market that they were 30 years ago either.
      It’s hard to use inflation to justify raising prices or adding exploitative features when you’re already seeing higher inflation adjusted profits due to a larger more accessible market, lower risk due to reduced publishing overhead, and more options for consumers, which would be expected to bring prices down.

    • dom@lemmy.ca
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      4 months ago

      Games also sell at a much higher volume than they did back then.

      Wages have also not kept up with inflation, which is why games at over 100$ would be out of reach as a casual hobby for most.

      • FireTower@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I agree with the sentiment on wages keeping up but I think ultimately the price isn’t as important as the value. I’ve bought a games for $60 that I’ve got 2k+ hrs in. That’s about 3 cents an hour, which I like to compare to a $15 dollar movie ticket that’s ~2-3 hrs of entertainment ($5-7.5 hr)

        Obviously not everyone, myself included, gets that much out of each game. But if some games costed $140 but did give 2k hrs of gameplay (7 cents per hr) I wouldnt be bothered. To be clear I don’t think disposable AAA should jack up prices, but if the price reflects the value offered I see no issue.

        On the volume thing I think we’ll probably start to plateau in the next 30 years w/ % of the total world pop consuming games, and inflation will continue. I only wish to point out that the eternal $60 price tag is something that probably should end in our lifetimes.

        • filister@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Your calculations are severely flawed. First of all not everyone has 2000hrs. to invest in games. Plus I am buying mostly single player games, and the only way to invest more time is if they have quality mods that are worth playing. Usually the main story of the games is 10-20 hours long. The rest are grind generic quests that are not fun. So 150$ divided by 15 is 10$ per hour, which as you can see is above the cinema price.

        • stardust@lemmy.ca
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          4 months ago

          It’s easier than ever for anyone to publish games. Not the old days anymore when a few publishers controlled the market of who could and couldn’t sell and would get promoted or not. More competion is going to drive down prices. Being able to charge high prices is more a luxury that would have been possible back in the past when consoles ruled supreme as opposed now with barrier to entry having gotten so low.

          • FireTower@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            That is patently not what I was arguing. If they don’t raise the price past $60 they’ll just be incentivized to get it through predatory micro transactions.

            And by arguing a business practice is unsustainable I’m not saying that entire industry pays employees in an equitable way.

    • filister@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      To be honest, I have only bought one or two games at full price. Most of the games I buy are having deep discounts.

    • Sethayy@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      Ah yes the easy dev environment of the 1990s, too bad none of our game dev tooling, experts on the subject, cross platform porting difficulty, and physical delivery costs have all stayed EXACTLY the same.

    • BedbugCutlefish@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Eh, apples to oranges.

      A 60$ game today is so unlike a 60$ two or three decades ago.

      No physical medium. Much larger market and (potential at least) sales volume.

      Proliferation of game engines; games don’t need to ‘reinvent the wheel’ each time, or write machine code anymore.

      On top of that, there’s many other revenue streams. Not that I think this model is ‘fair and good’, but look at the mobile market, where a sale cost of $0 is king.

      Something to be said about ‘lower cost incentivizing bad practices’ (as the article discusses), and yeah, some games could raise their price. But it’s far fron 1-1, as ‘sales volume’ trumps ‘sale price’ in importance.