Clue's kinda in the name. Old games.
Beside, the best counter-example is Paradox - whom I love. They're are pretty lax with this sort of thing. But they're an exception.
ignored.
Here is what my first post said:
"So right now the Xbone gives more rights than Steam? i didnt expect that."
And its 100% true and factual. Unlike Steam, you can sell your Xbone games. Its still completely shit because MS dictates how and where you sell but its still more than you get with modern PC gaming.
Why is the used game issue worse on the Xbone than it is on Steam?
What a bizarre way to control a commodity. All I really care about right now is how this affects Gamefly.
Would any of this be legal if it wasn't for Vernor v Autodesk?
steam is OK because it is like an app. if you didn't want it, you don't have to install it. it exists within a competitive market place so it has outside factors weighing in on it. you can like the service or not, you know it can't get too out of hand because of this.
the xbox one is a completely different scenario. all they have to do is convince consumers to buy and they're locked in to the ecosystem, no competitors. it's draconian. the console is basically a windows 8 OS so why not allow us to install competing market places? i don't know how you can defend this
What a bizarre way to control a commodity. All I really care about right now is how this affects Gamefly.
Would any of this be legal if it wasn't for Vernor v Autodesk?
No private selling? People are okay with this?? This is why the industry is getting shitty.
Thanks Microsoft.
UPDATE: Many readers are asking whether the £35 will be additional cost on top of the price of buying the game. No, we believe that the £35 figure which is not our number, incidentally would cover the entire transaction. If correct this would leave retail with a cut per sale of around £3.50.
We'll just agree to disagree here.For the simple fact that Steam has alternatives on the same platform.
For 90% of games I have a choice of buying it on Steam or off steam, including physical which I will actually own. Even for physical Steam Activated games, I have the assurance that
1. I'm not dealing with a greedy and blatantly anti-consumer corporate like Microsoft who answer to a Board of Directors full of asshats - Steam has a much better track record of being consumer friendly.
Steam does not always have great prices. Its been my experience (and ive heard it said multiple times throughout the years by Steam users) that retail prices are usually cheaper. Unless its a summer sale chances are the rest of the year the game is cheaper at Gamestop/Walmart/BestBuy.2. Steam has great prices. While technically this does not make it less restricting, it means I've most likely gotten the game at a significant discount that offsets my losses of second hand sale income. I benefit from the DRM, whereas with Xbone my benefit is NOTHING.
Supposedly it works now. Will the Xbone have offline functionality 7 years after release? Only time will tell.3. Steam has a functional offline mode.
lol4. Steam does not have LIVE TV!
Why is the used game issue worse on the Xbone than it is on Steam?
Here is what my first post said:
"So right now the Xbone gives more rights than Steam? i didnt expect that."
And its 100% true and factual. Unlike Steam, you can sell your Xbone games. Its still completely shit because MS dictates how and where you sell but its still more than you get with modern PC gaming.
edit:
And Steam is still present in physical copies. Resident Evil 6, Bioshock Infinite, Metro Last Light, Tomb Raider.. all of these have the Steam limitation even if you bought it in a physical store.
I'm pretty confused right now. Does this mean games will retail for £35 or what?
If all games are £35, new or pre-owned, that's actually pretty good news and somewhat welcome. If this price is exclusive to activating used games....
My question is why does it take this to give pubs a cut of the sales? Why couldn't Gamestop have done this before since they can muscle them to provide a pre-order bonus? This could have been settled long before Microsoft had to dip their hand into the pot.
Many people think pubs should not have a cut of used sales.
How many of you actually buy music CDs? I am just wondering. I bet all of you do.... right?
How many dollars is that?
Now those people no longer have a say in the matter.
How many dollars is that?
For reference the RRP of games are about £40-45, but practically everywhere online sells new releases for £32-35.How many dollars is that?
All pre-owned games will retail for a minimum of £35, if this rumour is correct. New games will obviously be higher.
Who would ever buy a used game at that price considering how fast games go on sale at retail now anyway? Injustice was like $35 a week and a half after release.52.91 USD at today's value.
This is indefensible.