Cool. Luckily, that all-digital future for consoles is not going to be a reality for at least another 10 years, and even that is a generously short estimate.In an all-digital future, there won't be any bombas. Pay $70 or you find another hobby.
No demos either. Buy the game if you want to play it.
If anything games will retail for $10 more. They're already trying this on the handhelds.
i think you mean, "price your product correctly".Cool. Luckily, that all-digital future for consoles is not going to be a reality for at least another 10 years, and even that is a generously short estimate.
PC Gaming on the other hand will be all-digital soon, at a guess, but the PC market set the standard early on that you need to discount your product.
I still find it funny people on GAF are naive enough to believe publishers would ever pass on savings to the consumer.
I've provided an exclusive one-of-a-kind digital lithographic artwork print, I mean a jpeg, for illustrative purposes:
http://www.abjecthubris.com/images/masseffect3digitallithograph.jpg[img][/QUOTE]
Does the one of a kind jpeg at least have a unique serial number in the exif data, or perhaps a downloadable certificate of authenticity.
Back when it was cheapI miss the 90 dollar SNES games.
I miss the 90 dollar SNES games.
No. Games will be $70 next gen with $20 day 1 DLC.
I miss the 90 dollar SNES games.
No. Games will be $70 next gen with $20 day 1 DLC.
No. Games will be $70 next gen with $20 day 1 DLC.
In an all-digital future, there won't be any bombas. Pay $70 or you find another hobby.
No demos either. Buy the game if you want to play it.
Steam only has sales because the publishers don't sell anything without them.Yes, unless companies want to make money. Steam generates a ton of revenue during a sale.
Publishers don't have to make all their monies upfront these days, so do you think any possible $10 increase in the MSRP of games will just become $10's worth of DLC in your average game? Or is it possible that we'll move to $69.99 games?
EDIT: As in, the MSRP stays 59.99, but DLC becomes more aggressive to the point where you're paying at least $10 just to get the "full" game in most games.
Steam only has sales because the publishers don't sell anything without them.
If those sales generated "a ton of revenue", why don't we have them on PSN and XBLA ?
All signs point to no
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I bet you miss these days as well...
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Steam only has sales because the publishers don't sell anything without them.
If those sales "generate a ton of revenue", we would've had them on PSN and XBLA many times as well. But we haven't, so they don't.
What reaction ? To what ?Just spit-balling here, but perhaps the reaction to sales on PSN and XBLA is far smaller than the reaction on Steam to sales since the players on consoles are far less trained to buying full games digitally.
I updated the title because people were responding to the title rather than the OP.
Thanks, I should've been more clear.
Overall, I'm a little surprised that most people think it's a forgone conclusion that things will only get worse. I guess it makes sens though, considering recent practices.
Because they'll do whatever they can get away with. And they're getting away fine right now, so they'll only ramp it up.
$70 games is absurd. There is no way game prices go up. If anything, current market trends show that a cheap initial investment with a lot of DLC or microtransactions yields the best return. Not enough people would pay $70 for a game for this to be financially feasible.
I updated the title because people were responding to the title rather than the OP.
That's pretty reasonable for a price drop though. Not like you see Oblivion permanently marked down to $5 or anything, just for a one day sale or something.It's a joke. During a Steam sale, all of those games would cost you less than $10.