• ram
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    229 months ago

    I’m already not buying $70 games, I’m not gonna buy them at $80 or $90 either.

  • @paultimate14@lemmy.world
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    129 months ago

    Interestingly other publications have an additional quote

    “Just as the recession doesn’t stop people from going to the cinema or going to their favourite artist’s concert, high-quality games will continue to sell well,” he said.

    Kind of embarrassing to have a company president who doesn’t understand the Econ 101 concept of normal goods.

  • Arashikage
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    109 months ago

    Give us less and charge us more, that’s the big gaming company MO

  • @McScience@discuss.online
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    89 months ago

    I know I’m gonna get flamed for this, but I kinda agree.

    I paid $60 for games back when a bottle of coke in a vending machine was 25 cents. Now I regularly see sodas in vending machines at $1.50 but games are still $60? Don’t get me wrong I’m grateful, but when you have a 0% price increase over a period of time where inflation increases by 150%+ everywhere else, it’s hardly surprising the companies are looking for new ways to monetize.

    • @lustyargonian@lemm.ee
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      109 months ago

      Devil’s devil’s advocate; gaming has grown many times over. GTA 3 sold 15M copies in 7 years, GTA 4 sold 6M copies in a week, GTA 5 sold 11M copies in 24 hours.

    • @guacupado@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      What you’re missing is that you don’t simply buy a $60 game anymore. You used to buy a $60 and that was that. Now you buy the game and have to $5 or $20 here and there for half of the content.

      He said " The company’s major releases this year - Exoprimal, Resident Evil 4 Remake, and Street Fighter 6 - were priced at $60 at launch. " Meanwhile just the TMNT content of Street Fighter 6 costs $100 to get all of it.

      Zero reason to increase game prices unless they want to get rid of MTX. Even single player games have MTX. They’re making more money than ever.

    • @Crystal_Shards64@lemmy.world
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      49 months ago

      Maybe not the best comparison considering in the past couple years inflation on food has been artificially inflated due to corporate greed.

      I wouldn’t mind paying slightly more for games if the money was actually going into developers pockets.

      All that being said though, unless it’s a very specific title, I’ve been waiting for sales for the past decade. I only buy a game or two for full price a year (usually Nintendo because they rarely do sales)

    • @FireTower@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      The $60 price tag has not kept up with inflation. I’d gladly pay more if it meant I got a better game.

      If $60 dollars was fair for a game in 2013 $80 should be fair in 2023.

      • @thedirtyknapkin@lemmy.world
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        49 months ago

        it’s only an acceptable trade if the games then also don’t have micro transactions. it’s not like these companies aren’t profitable…

  • ppb1701
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    39 months ago

    @lemmy.world While their costs have increased dramatically, wages have overall not kept up. Food or game, people will pick food. As a side pet peeve, how about more companies actually release a non broken day 1 game that doesn’t need a zillion patches to be playable first?

    • AlexanderTheGreatOPM
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      39 months ago

      I’m even okay with it being a little broken (very little) as long as everything in the game is included in the price and I don’t have to microtransaction my way to a full game.

  • SokathHisEyesOpen
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    9 months ago

    Salaries are too low, say employees everywhere.

    Game prices are too high, say gamers everywhere.