Haven't posted much, but just wanted to give my thoughts on this.
I've been a PS owner since I promised I wouldn't buy a MS system again after they knowingly put out faulty machines in the 360 era.
That said, I decided I'd buy one for this gen just to play gears tactics. And then the buy out of Bethesda sealed the deal. I couldn't not play fallout, elder scrolls or probably even star field.
I don't play COD and haven't for about 10 years. I'm not a fan of any multiplayer games.
Having given the background, my thoughts are as follows:
1: this adds nothing to game Industry. It simply takes away from the whole and gates it off from roughly half of the community. Xbox fans are in no better position with his acquisition. Sony fans are worse off. Assuming they play COD.
2: aside from Microsoft releasing soon to break consoles in the 360, they also
A) tried to bully through anti consumer policies with the Xbox one
B) essentially abandoned a whole generation of console owners with little exclusives. They failed at making exclusives and were embarrassed by Sony.
3: gamepass is obviously compelling value. But do people think given all of the above that as soon as Microsoft can screw consumers with price rises they won't do it?
All in all, the strategy Microsoft is employing will do nothing but hurt the games industry. How much is still unclear. But those thinking a company using money not earnt from the gaming industry to try and cripple the market leader of the game industry, can be anything but bad for everyone has no scope to look at things from a long term point of view.
Haven't posted much, but just wanted to give my thoughts on this.
I've been a PS owner since I promised I wouldn't buy a MS system again after they knowingly put out faulty machines in the 360 era.
That said, I decided I'd buy one for this gen just to play gears tactics. And then the buy out of Bethesda sealed the deal. I couldn't not play fallout, elder scrolls or probably even star field.
I don't play COD and haven't for about 10 years. I'm not a fan of any multiplayer games.
Having given the background, my thoughts are as follows:
1: this adds nothing to game Industry. It simply takes away from the whole and gates it off from roughly half of the community. Xbox fans are in no better position with his acquisition. Sony fans are worse off. Assuming they play COD.
2: aside from Microsoft releasing soon to break consoles in the 360, they also
A) tried to bully through anti consumer policies with the Xbox one
B) essentially abandoned a whole generation of console owners with little exclusives. They failed at making exclusives and were embarrassed by Sony.
3: gamepass is obviously compelling value. But do people think given all of the above that as soon as Microsoft can screw consumers with price rises they won't do it?
All in all, the strategy Microsoft is employing will do nothing but hurt the games industry. How much is still unclear. But those thinking a company using money not earnt from the gaming industry to try and cripple the market leader of the game industry, can be anything but bad for everyone has no scope to look at things from a long term point of view.
Consumers can kinda screw MS back, there has been numerous strategies to get Gamepass cheap over the years. And if the standard price go up too much people will no doubt make it heard if they're not okay with it just like the Xbox Live price increase.3: gamepass is obviously compelling value. But do people think given all of the above that as soon as Microsoft can screw consumers with price rises they won't do it?
Haven't posted much, but just wanted to give my thoughts on this.
I've been a PS owner since I promised I wouldn't buy a MS system again after they knowingly put out faulty machines in the 360 era.
That said, I decided I'd buy one for this gen just to play gears tactics. And then the buy out of Bethesda sealed the deal. I couldn't not play fallout, elder scrolls or probably even star field.
I don't play COD and haven't for about 10 years. I'm not a fan of any multiplayer games.
Having given the background, my thoughts are as follows:
1: this adds nothing to game Industry. It simply takes away from the whole and gates it off from roughly half of the community. Xbox fans are in no better position with his acquisition. Sony fans are worse off. Assuming they play COD.
2: aside from Microsoft releasing soon to break consoles in the 360, they also
A) tried to bully through anti consumer policies with the Xbox one
B) essentially abandoned a whole generation of console owners with little exclusives. They failed at making exclusives and were embarrassed by Sony.
3: gamepass is obviously compelling value. But do people think given all of the above that as soon as Microsoft can screw consumers with price rises they won't do it?
All in all, the strategy Microsoft is employing will do nothing but hurt the games industry. How much is still unclear. But those thinking a company using money not earnt from the gaming industry to try and cripple the market leader of the game industry, can be anything but bad for everyone has no scope to look at things from a long term point of view.
1: this adds nothing to game Industry. It simply takes away from the whole and gates it off from roughly half of the community. Xbox fans are in no better position with his acquisition. Sony fans are worse off. Assuming they play COD.
B) essentially abandoned a whole generation of console owners with little exclusives. They failed at making exclusives and were embarrassed by Sony.
3: gamepass is obviously compelling value. But do people think given all of the above that as soon as Microsoft can screw consumers with price rises they won't do it?
All in all, the strategy Microsoft is employing will do nothing but hurt the games industry. How much is still unclear. But those thinking a company using money not earnt from the gaming industry to try and cripple the market leader of the game industry, can be anything but bad for everyone has no scope to look at things from a long term point of view.
The big problem I have with this viewpoint is that it also perfectly describes Sony's actions in carefully and craftily buying what seems to be permanent exclusivity for Square's big, AAA JRPGs. It doesn't benefit PLayStation gamers and takes away from Xbox. Yet you did not express these sentiments.
This seems like rank hypocrisy to me.
Another thing you say which leaves you open to credible accusations of hypocrisy and confusion.
First you condemn Microsoft for not having enough exclusives in the xbox one era, which is a direct result of only having a handful of first party studios. Then when they move to rectify this by purchasing studios to grow their first party capabilities, you condemn them too. How does this make sense to you?
There is no record on this forum of you complaining about the price hike to $70 for Sony's first party games, so it really feels like hypocrisy for you to shoe-horn this point in.
Gamepass MIGHT go up in price this gen. We don't know. What we do know for certain is that it's going to skyrocket in value when activision's games get added, and when Bethesda's studios really get going. If we get to the point where there's a cadence of 5-6 AAA first party games launching to the service every year, including staples like Call of Duty, then even a $5 increase cannot be said to be exploitative.
All these arguments about Gamepass price increase all come from a viewpoint that imagines the value of the service remains stagnant, and that's just juvenile logic.
Given that MS would still be 3rd in revenue and trail the market leader in brand perception, I have no idea where some of you have bought this notion that their overarching plan is to 'try to cripple Sony'. They've repeated this over and over that they see themselves enmeshed in a long conflict with the likes of Google, Amazon and Facebook for content dominance. Unfortunate that you cannot see beyond a frantic desire to defend your favorite console maker.
Tell me how this deal 'harms gaming' any more than Tencent's and Embracer's acquisition sprees with their end games shrouded in secrecy.
The Xbox one generation.2) Dunno what your even on about? What generation was abandoned? What anti consumer practices? The shit return policy on digital good? Next gen upgrade fees? Oh wait that's Sony….
1) "Xbox fans are in no better position" - yes, they are. They now have day 1 access to a huge raft of titles via the Gamepass subscription most of them already have.Haven't posted much, but just wanted to give my thoughts on this.
I've been a PS owner since I promised I wouldn't buy a MS system again after they knowingly put out faulty machines in the 360 era.
That said, I decided I'd buy one for this gen just to play gears tactics. And then the buy out of Bethesda sealed the deal. I couldn't not play fallout, elder scrolls or probably even star field.
I don't play COD and haven't for about 10 years. I'm not a fan of any multiplayer games.
Having given the background, my thoughts are as follows:
1: this adds nothing to game Industry. It simply takes away from the whole and gates it off from roughly half of the community. Xbox fans are in no better position with his acquisition. Sony fans are worse off. Assuming they play COD.
2: aside from Microsoft releasing soon to break consoles in the 360, they also
A) tried to bully through anti consumer policies with the Xbox one
B) essentially abandoned a whole generation of console owners with little exclusives. They failed at making exclusives and were embarrassed by Sony.
3: gamepass is obviously compelling value. But do people think given all of the above that as soon as Microsoft can screw consumers with price rises they won't do it?
All in all, the strategy Microsoft is employing will do nothing but hurt the games industry. How much is still unclear. But those thinking a company using money not earnt from the gaming industry to try and cripple the market leader of the game industry, can be anything but bad for everyone has no scope to look at things from a long term point of view.
I don't see any likeness in square and some timed exclusives vs a $70 billion purchase of activision. Xbox has never gained traction in Japan so I'm sure there is little incentive for square to release jrpgs on Xbox. Whereas the majority of COD players are on PlayStation as far as I know.
My frustration re the xbox one generation is that it showed that seemingly Xbox couldn't work out how to make exclusives, let alone exclusives that peopled cared about. So instead of trying to fix that, clearly they have decided to skip that step and buy them (with computer division money). Whilst a little risky, it is a great move to buy yourself credibility. But I don't believe it's fair, or reflects well on Xbox's gaming division. They've effectively said, "we give up trying to make games, here's daddy's cheque book. Sort it out". All Of that is completely different to Sony, which isn't even really up for debate.
Re gamepass price rises, im not saying that can't increase the price. Im just saying that long term I predict those that champion it today, will be complaining about its value. The more consolidated that the service becomes, the less competition that they have, the more they will use that power to screw the consumer. As they've done before.
The last point you make, about Microsoft's long term plan. It's true that I don't know their scheming etc. nor do you. But one thing is for sure, I don't believe a word they say. Before announcing Bethesda he was saying he didn't like the idea of exclusives. That changed really quick.
1: this adds nothing to game Industry. It simply takes away from the whole and gates it off from roughly half of the community. Xbox fans are in no better position with his acquisition. Sony fans are worse off. Assuming they play COD.
3: gamepass is obviously compelling value. But do people think given all of the above that as soon as Microsoft can screw consumers with price rises they won't do it?
Reminder on how not all the enormous acquisitions go through.
This isn't a suggestion that the AB acquisition is in grave danger or something, but for an acquisition of this scale the legislators will be pushing for anti-monopoly obligations.
Nvidia did promise to give full access of ARM's newest uarchs to their current competitors and it still didn't go through.
Of course, AFAIK Nvidia does have a worse history of monopolistic practices than Microsoft in the last ~10 years, and those were probably used by the plaintiffs to push the class action suit and kill the ARM deal.
I think Microsoft will probably be safe if they sign a contract saying they'll release Call of Duty, Diablo and others on Playstation for at least the next 10 years or so.
Which is on par with what Phil Spencer has been saying.
Note: I never played a single Activision Blizzard game on a console, I personally don't care either way. I'm simply commenting on the deal terms which will definitely go through a lot of hoops throughout 2022 and 2023.
I think Microsoft will probably be safe if they sign a contract saying they'll release Call of Duty, Diablo and others on Playstation for at least the next 10 years or so.
Which is on par with what Phil Spencer has been saying.
Reminder on how not all the enormous acquisitions go through.
This isn't a suggestion that the AB acquisition is in grave danger or something, but for an acquisition of this scale the legislators will be pushing for anti-monopoly obligations.
Excellent points. Finally someone that is not treating MS like a bullied child in the kintergarden.Haven't posted much, but just wanted to give my thoughts on this.
I've been a PS owner since I promised I wouldn't buy a MS system again after they knowingly put out faulty machines in the 360 era.
That said, I decided I'd buy one for this gen just to play gears tactics. And then the buy out of Bethesda sealed the deal. I couldn't not play fallout, elder scrolls or probably even star field.
I don't play COD and haven't for about 10 years. I'm not a fan of any multiplayer games.
Having given the background, my thoughts are as follows:
1: this adds nothing to game Industry. It simply takes away from the whole and gates it off from roughly half of the community. Xbox fans are in no better position with his acquisition. Sony fans are worse off. Assuming they play COD.
2: aside from Microsoft releasing soon to break consoles in the 360, they also
A) tried to bully through anti consumer policies with the Xbox one
B) essentially abandoned a whole generation of console owners with little exclusives. They failed at making exclusives and were embarrassed by Sony.
3: gamepass is obviously compelling value. But do people think given all of the above that as soon as Microsoft can screw consumers with price rises they won't do it?
All in all, the strategy Microsoft is employing will do nothing but hurt the games industry. How much is still unclear. But those thinking a company using money not earnt from the gaming industry to try and cripple the market leader of the game industry, can be anything but bad for everyone has no scope to look at things from a long term point of view.
Haven't posted much, but just wanted to give my thoughts on this.
I've been a PS owner since I promised I wouldn't buy a MS system again after they knowingly put out faulty machines in the 360 era.
That said, I decided I'd buy one for this gen just to play gears tactics. And then the buy out of Bethesda sealed the deal. I couldn't not play fallout, elder scrolls or probably even star field.
I don't play COD and haven't for about 10 years. I'm not a fan of any multiplayer games.
Having given the background, my thoughts are as follows:
1: this adds nothing to game Industry. It simply takes away from the whole and gates it off from roughly half of the community. Xbox fans are in no better position with his acquisition. Sony fans are worse off. Assuming they play COD.
2: aside from Microsoft releasing soon to break consoles in the 360, they also
A) tried to bully through anti consumer policies with the Xbox one
B) essentially abandoned a whole generation of console owners with little exclusives. They failed at making exclusives and were embarrassed by Sony.
3: gamepass is obviously compelling value. But do people think given all of the above that as soon as Microsoft can screw consumers with price rises they won't do it?
All in all, the strategy Microsoft is employing will do nothing but hurt the games industry. How much is still unclear. But those thinking a company using money not earnt from the gaming industry to try and cripple the market leader of the game industry, can be anything but bad for everyone has no scope to look at things from a long term point of view.
What MS is doing with GP is similar to what they did with Windows back then. In the past, they didn't care people used pirated Windows as long as they learnt the OS. Then suddenly they started to care about that. It was a trojan horse just like they're doing with GP. they're letting you do this now, it won't last forever.Consumers can kinda screw MS back, there has been numerous strategies to get Gamepass cheap over the years. And if the standard price go up too much people will no doubt make it heard if they're not okay with it just like the Xbox Live price increase.
Multiple companies were able to put forward credible arguments that an NVIDiA acquisition of ARM would be an existential threat to their future.
Not even Sony has bothered to make this argument for the Activision case.
If the concern is with 'monopoly' and 'consolidation', of what benefit would that pledge do? And why stop at PlayStation? What of Stadia? Amazon Luna? GeForce Now?
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it will until 2023 and after that under form of warzone at 100%I think someone got really triggered with the idea of Call of Duty continuing to release on Playstation consoles.
As some mentioned there is definitely some hypocrisy in your posts that should be called out. My overall thoughts on the situation.The Xbox one generation.
They tried to change the way people owned games, refused to listen to the wails of anguish from fans, and only changed their policy when they realised all the good will and brand identicication they won with the 360, was being washed away with few people buying a One at the start of the generation.
Then, Cleary once they saw the writing was on the wall, and the generation lost. They cut the gen loose and focused on the next fight.
A fight I will acknowledge they are fighting very well.
They have gone back to not caring. Also they do seem to take it market by market.Then suddenly they started to care about that.
I think someone got really triggered with the idea of Call of Duty continuing to release on Playstation consoles.
And they'll care about how much you spend on gamepass soon enough.They have gone back to not caring. Also they do seem to take it market by market.
If there isn't people buying dlc/mtx/games, more so. If there is, then they don't need to increase gamepass costs imo.And they'll care about how much you spend on gamepass soon enough.
The Xbox one generation.
They tried to change the way people owned games, refused to listen to the wails of anguish from fans, and only changed their policy when they realised all the good will and brand identicication they won with the 360, was being washed away with few people buying a One at the start of the generation.
Then, Cleary once they saw the writing was on the wall, and the generation lost. They cut the gen loose and focused on the next fight.
A fight I will acknowledge they are fighting very well.
I think it's a little different here. Prime is not Amazon's core business, GP is Xbox's core business. You have to compare it with Netflix.If there isn't people buying dlc/mtx/games, more so. If there is, then they don't need to increase gamepass costs imo.
How many times has amazon prime go up in price?
February 2005: Amazon Prime debuts and announced for $79/year.
March 2014: Membership jumped $20 from $79/year to $99/year.
June 2018: Rates jumped another $20 to its current $119/year cost.
Every 4 years it seems.
Netflix has basically a single revenue stream.I think it's a little different here. Prime is not Amazon's core business, GP is Xbox's core business. You have to compare it with Netflix.
And they'll care about how much you spend on gamepass soon enough.
And they'll care about how much you spend on gamepass soon enough.
Lol I never ever played COD and not planning too.
To me the constant fearmongering on the GP price going up in the future is just an admission of its unparalleled value. I see it as people thinking it's just too good to be true at the moment.I wonder if - on a different forum - there's Google Docs fans spreading FUD about Microsoft hiking pricing for Office 365 subscriptions.
I'm pretty sure they're aware on the need to keep prices palatable and maintain the service at great value for money.
I like this arrangement, though. You can keep ringing 'the end is nigh!' bells while I enjoy my Gamepass games![]()
Office 365 is already pretty expensive as it is. But it's way cheaper to maintain than GP. You can't be serious in thinking GP won't raise in price. You're in for a rude awakening.I wonder if - on a different forum - there's Google Docs fans spreading FUD about Microsoft hiking pricing for Office 365 subscriptions.
I'm pretty sure they're aware on the need to keep prices palatable and maintain the service at great value for money.
I like this arrangement, though. You can keep ringing 'the end is nigh!' bells while I enjoy my Gamepass games![]()
Haven't posted much, but just wanted to give my thoughts on this.
I've been a PS owner since I promised I wouldn't buy a MS system again after they knowingly put out faulty machines in the 360 era.
That said, I decided I'd buy one for this gen just to play gears tactics. And then the buy out of Bethesda sealed the deal. I couldn't not play fallout, elder scrolls or probably even star field.
I don't play COD and haven't for about 10 years. I'm not a fan of any multiplayer games.
Having given the background, my thoughts are as follows:
1: this adds nothing to game Industry. It simply takes away from the whole and gates it off from roughly half of the community. Xbox fans are in no better position with his acquisition. Sony fans are worse off. Assuming they play COD.
2: aside from Microsoft releasing soon to break consoles in the 360, they also
A) tried to bully through anti consumer policies with the Xbox one
B) essentially abandoned a whole generation of console owners with little exclusives. They failed at making exclusives and were embarrassed by Sony.
3: gamepass is obviously compelling value. But do people think given all of the above that as soon as Microsoft can screw consumers with price rises they won't do it?
All in all, the strategy Microsoft is employing will do nothing but hurt the games industry. How much is still unclear. But those thinking a company using money not earnt from the gaming industry to try and cripple the market leader of the game industry, can be anything but bad for everyone has no scope to look at things from a long term point of view.
Office 365 is already pretty expensive as it is. But it's way cheaper to maintain than GP. You can't be serious in thinking GP won't raise in price. You're in for a rude awakening.
So we are comparing Don Mattrick to Phil Spencer? I might actually play COD now but the Bluzzard get is huge and absolutely improves my investment into gamepass.![]()
Finally someone without memory of a goldfish.
Reminder on how not all the enormous acquisitions go through.
This isn't a suggestion that the AB acquisition is in grave danger or something, but for an acquisition of this scale the legislators will be pushing for anti-monopoly obligations.
Nvidia did promise to give full access of ARM's newest uarchs to their current competitors and it still didn't go through.
Of course, AFAIK Nvidia does have a worse history of monopolistic practices than Microsoft in the last ~10 years, and those were probably used by the plaintiffs to push the class action suit and kill the ARM deal.
I think Microsoft will probably be safe if they sign a contract saying they'll release Call of Duty, Diablo and others on Playstation for at least the next 10 years or so.
Which is on par with what Phil Spencer has been saying.
Note: I never played a single Activision Blizzard game on a console, I personally don't care either way. I'm simply commenting on the deal terms which will definitely go through a lot of hoops throughout 2022 and 2023.
What are you talking about?Then, Cleary once they saw the writing was on the wall, and the generation lost. They cut the gen loose and focused on the next fight.
Bro could you do me a favor and remind me this amazing movie's name?Spencer to Kotick after the deal is finalized
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Office 365 is expensive? What? 69€/year is expensive? The ammount of work i do on their software, i pay that cost in 2 days of work.Office 365 is already pretty expensive as it is. But it's way cheaper to maintain than GP. You can't be serious in thinking GP won't raise in price. You're in for a rude awakening.
Kung Fu HustleBro could you do me a favor and remind me this amazing movie's name?
Nobody said they would be raised above palatable figures lol you're trying to hard to have a gotcha moment here.I never said the price couldn't come up. You should learn to read these posts carefully.
I said that prices won't be raised above palatable figures, and that VALUE would be maintained.
Price =/= value
Gamepass, to me, is great value right now. In the future, the only thing we know for certain is that the number of first party games will dramatically increase. And those Don't get taken off the service. Not to mention Activision's back catalogue. A small price increase will still maintain great value since the number of games are increasing dramatically.
Reminder on how not all the enormous acquisitions go through.
This isn't a suggestion that the AB acquisition is in grave danger or something, but for an acquisition of this scale the legislators will be pushing for anti-monopoly obligations.
Nvidia did promise to give full access of ARM's newest uarchs to their current competitors and it still didn't go through.
Of course, AFAIK Nvidia does have a worse history of monopolistic practices than Microsoft in the last ~10 years, and those were probably used by the plaintiffs to push the class action suit and kill the ARM deal.
I think Microsoft will probably be safe if they sign a contract saying they'll release Call of Duty, Diablo and others on Playstation for at least the next 10 years or so.
Which is on par with what Phil Spencer has been saying.
Note: I never played a single Activision Blizzard game on a console, I personally don't care either way. I'm simply commenting on the deal terms which will definitely go through a lot of hoops throughout 2022 and 2023.