Compared to what? Online play is included with almost every game possible this generation.KevinCow said:And it's obscene considering how few features most games ship with today.
Really? What do they have?John said:Sears clearance tomorrow can't wait
I don't know. I was just celebrating being a cheap-ass.fps fanatic said:Really? What do they have?
Tiktaalik said:I don't see any reason why future DD services would not have a wide variety of retail innovations.
obonicus said:Why do you assume this is possible? Do you think that cutting prices by half or by 2/3 you'd see new sales increase proportionally?
RurouniZel said:Have you taken a look at how well games are selling on the DS? Games like Professor Layton and Phoenix Wright sell well partially because they're $30. Do you think they'd sell just as well at $50-$60?
obonicus said:who's cutting the price in this situation? Is it all coming out of the publisher's pocket?
Drek said:To then overtly promote used over new titles is being a disingenuous business partner.
John said:I don't know. I was just celebrating being a cheap-ass.
DD-only companies never have to clear stock.
I can't remember the last time there's ever been a game shortage in New Jersey. That's never been a problem for me.Tacitus_ said:They never have to get any, either.
That's what Jaffe's saying publishers are too weak-kneed to do right now, but will inevitably happen.Juice said:Does no one here understand the first sales doctrine?
If you're selling media, you get to make money once. Deal. You don't see authors burning down libraries.
If you're selling a license to use your media, then you have all kinds of control.
If the publishers don't like GameStop, then they should just stop selling discs and only sell download code cards to put into stores.
Is this thread just full of juniors or something? What's with the inexplicable emotional investment over such a straightforward economic and legal issue?
*My sarcasm meter failed* :lol Carry on...John said:I don't know. I was just celebrating being a cheap-ass.
DD-only companies never have to clear stock.
Drek said:Say you grow lemons and need a way to sell them. I want to open a lemonade stand. So we decide "great! lets set up a distributor based relationship!" A few months down the road I've been selling (and by proxy ordering) fewer and fewer lemons from you. Come to find out its because I started buying concentrate from the local big box store and whenever a customer comes up asking for some lemonade I talk to them about how lemonade from concentrate tastes just like fresh lemonade and look at how much money it saves you! Then I start giving out customer appreciation cards where the more lemonade from concentrate you buy the cheaper I sell it to you, but nothing of the sort for fresh lemonade.
You as the lemon farmer, seeing me overtly subverting the business relationship we're supposed to be working on in order to pad my own profits, are going to continue supporting this?
Drek said:seeing me overtly subverting the business relationship we're supposed to be working on in order to pad my own profits
He wasn't being an incendiary asshole. The first asshole-y comment of the transcript was 'don't let the door hit you on the way out'.hauton said:My original point was that egghead was being an incendiary asshole for the sake of being one, but yes, I still think Jaffe's right.
Feel free to argue that, I honestly don't care.
Nah, it was definitelyproposition said:He wasn't being an incendiary asshole. The first asshole-y comment of the transcript was 'don't let the door hit you on the way out'.
Les: @djaffe What you say is a possibility. If it comes to pass then I may stop being a game consumer.
dragonfart28 said:EA/Activision/Sony/Nintendo/Microsoft will then swoop in and follow suit, but these conservative companies will not be the ones to get rid of the retail market in favour of downloadable media. They are too greedy to change the price of their media to reflect the lower cost of digital distribution.
Juice said:Does no one here understand the first sales doctrine?
If you're selling media, you get to make money once. Deal. You don't see authors burning down libraries.
If you're selling a license to use your media, then you have all kinds of control.
If the publishers don't like GameStop, then they should just stop selling discs and only sell download code cards to put into stores.
Is this thread just full of juniors or something? What's with the inexplicable emotional investment over such a straightforward economic and legal issue?
John said:That's what Jaffe's saying publishers are too weak-kneed to do right now, but will inevitably happen.
Not really, the issue is that Jaffe says the publishers are going to transition to selling a license via DD in order to get away from the predatory practices of media retailers by cutting them out and that there wouldn't be as much of a push towards this if it wasn't for the douchebag way that Gstop acts.Juice said:Does no one here understand the first sales doctrine?
If you're selling media, you get to make money once. Deal. You don't see authors burning down libraries.
If you're selling a license to use your media, then you have all kinds of control.
If the publishers don't like GameStop, then they should just stop selling discs and only sell download code cards to put into stores.
Is this thread just full of juniors or something? What's with the inexplicable emotional investment over such a straightforward economic and legal issue?
Draft said:Wow, trying to read a conversation in twitter format is... ugh.
Can't wait for the full DD future.
Sorry, all you game pawn shop toolbags.
Pretty much. I don't see it happening 100%.Scrubking said:LOL. They'll try.
Pretty much. Sure I could have bought Hearts of Iron 3 on Gamersgate, but I *want* the disc. I want to know that I own the game independently of the continued existence of the service provider. I may choose to purchase smaller XBLA style games digitally, but there's no way in hell I'm moving my primary purchases digital-only.Ardorx said:So what happens when I spend $1000's on downloadable titles and the console maker goes under?
What happens if my system breaks down?
What happens when the next console is released?
DRM?
Will I be able to play my downloadable games 20 years after it's initial release? 10 years after?
Sorry, there are just too many issues with 100% DD and I'm sure most of you championing just don't realize how shitty it's going to be.
Juice said:Does no one here understand the first sales doctrine?
If you're selling media, you get to make money once. Deal. You don't see authors burning down libraries.
If you're selling a license to use your media, then you have all kinds of control.
If the publishers don't like GameStop, then they should just stop selling discs and only sell download code cards to put into stores.
Is this thread just full of juniors or something? What's with the inexplicable emotional investment over such a straightforward economic and legal issue?
Here's a point lost in going on strict DD model: the impulse buying consumer. When an uninformed consumer goes to a store to buy various items and not games in particular, they sometimes will choose a game based on a name or an illustration. How else does shovelware get sold? Are these consumers still gonna impulse buy if they are actively looking for games and not buying games as an afterthought?
Azih said:Not really, the issue is that Jaffe says the publishers are going to transition to selling a license via DD in order to get away from the predatory practices of media retailers by cutting them out and that there wouldn't be as much of a push towards this if it wasn't for the douchebag way that Gstop acts.
Scrubking said:Predatory practices? Cutting them out?
If developers really hate Gamestop the solution is incredibly simple - stop selling them your games! They are not the only retailer in the world.
Ardorx said:So what happens when I spend $1000's on downloadable titles and the console maker goes under?
What happens if my system breaks down?
What happens when the next console is released?
DRM?
Will I be able to play my downloadable games 20 years after it's initial release? 10 years after?
Sorry, there are just too many issues with 100% DD and I'm sure most of you championing just don't realize how shitty it's going to be.
Scrubking said:Predatory practices? Cutting them out?
I'm really sick of how people talk about Gamestop as if they owed something to developers apart from the money they paid them for the games they bought.
When you buy a game you own it. When Gamestop buys a game they own it. Just like Jaffe can't demand a cut of you selling a used game on Ebay he can't demand a cut from anybody including Gamestop.
Gamestop has the right to buy as many games as they feel like it and the right to stop buying new games in order to resell ones they bought used.
If there is a problem here it isn't Gamestop but developers who see them making a profit and in their greed want some of it too even though they have absolutely no right to it.
If developers really hate Gamestop the solution is incredibly simple - stop selling them your games! They are not the only retailer in the world.
Cynar said:Yes, and the others who aren't juniors I think must've recently been promoted to members. :lol There is no way a sane person would ever agree with the publisher unless they;
A: enjoy getting screwed in the ass
B: work for a publisher, dev, whatever and receiving money for it.
C: both A and B
Mario said:I feel like a parrot. Prices of DD games that have a retail version are held at that level because of pressure from retailers.
Retailers have such leverage because the sales of retail versions currently outweigh the sales of digital versions of games. When the sales balance shifts heavily if favour of digital, that leverage will be lost and things will likely change.
I would never count on these companies honoring their promises of unlock keys in the event that they go under. That would be the least of their concerns.arstal said:This is one reason I stick with Impulse. I figure Stardock, of the four big DD companies, is the one that is least likely to go under fly-by-night. We'd get rumblings- especially since their business model isn't just games. Valve and Paradox seem pretty safe as well.
The model is like Coke, Cheerwine, and Mr.Pibb right now, hoping either Stardock or Paradox just up to be Pepsi.
Each of those two, as well as Paradox, has promised to put a DRM-free patch should doomsday occur. I believe all three would do so. Worst case, pirates will have cracked it to be DRM-free already if it's on PC.
John said:I can't remember the last time there's ever been a game shortage in New Jersey. That's never been a problem for me.
Tacitus_ said:I meant as in they won't have to overstock the game. So theoritically, you should have lower prices.
FLEABttn said:Not really, there's a perfectly sane argument against first sales doctrine in the case of videogames, that the way GameStop does its business hurts game development. I'm not going to take a stand on this situation, but if you're eventually going to deal with certain games no longer being made, or publshers will start including "one use only" CD key that binds a game to your Live or PSN account.
Opiate said:This is true in all fields. Lots of cars aren't made because they wouldn't sell enough new ones in the current market, but might sell enough new ones if new was the only option on the market. You want examples? Pontiac began shying away from its muscle car brands in the mid 1980s because the used market was making it infeasible. That's a primary reason the Firebird went away. And this is BEFORE we discuss cars that never even existed, i.e. cars we don't know about, which theoretically could have existed if 100% of all cars were purchased new.
The difference isn't that "used sales hurt game gevelopment," because used sales effect production of new products in every industry. The difference is that game development isn't set up to accomodate the used industry in the way others are. That sounds like game development's problem, not used sales. It would be like a car industry that refused to produce anything but Firebird-esque cars, then complained that the market is tilted against them.
Being hyperbolic alone isn't offensive. Nor is being whiney. Using a tarted up version of 'fuck off' is.John said:Waving the customer card around in everybody's face is definitely asshole material. Of course he's not going to stop playing games completely if retail games were to vanish. He's just hyperbolizing whinily (two made-up words, awesome).
Tideas said:What is everyone's opinion on the option that EA did last year?
When you buy a game, you can play its single player aspect, but in order to play multiplayer, you must register your PSN/Xbox live name with the key that came with the game.
It's a one time used code only, and if you resell the game to Gamestop, the next person to buy the game used can't play it. If they want to play online, they'll have to go and buy a $30 code to play online.
I personally see that a good workaround for publishers to fight used games.
Starchasing said:Lets say companies stock selling phisycal media...
lets say i want to buy a soccer game...
i basicly have 2 options
fifa or PES
do you think that EA will lower its price when it owns the whole chain of production??
dev -> publisher -> retailer ???
Definitely better than DD or single-use licenses, but it's still a slippery slope.Tideas said:What is everyone's opinion on the option that EA did last year?
When you buy a game, you can play its single player aspect, but in order to play multiplayer, you must register your PSN/Xbox live name with the key that came with the game.
It's a one time used code only, and if you resell the game to Gamestop, the next person to buy the game used can't play it. If they want to play online, they'll have to go and buy a $30 code to play online.
I personally see that a good workaround for publishers to fight used games.
FLEABttn said:Every example made on GAF trying to relate the game industry to another industry, from both sides of the argument, has been absolutely terrible.
Opiate said:Most have been very good, in my opinion. I find it absurd that people could think of the video game industry as magical and unique, completely different from every other industry. This isn't just cars -- it's jewelry, movies, firearms, books, houses, music, TVs and other electronics, furniture, and so on. Every single one has a used market.
Your point should be obviously specious, however. You claimed that other industries aren't hurt by used sales. If by "hurt" you mean "some people who would buy new buy used instead," then obviously every other industry is hurt by used sales. Do you think people who buy used cars would choose not to buy a car if only new cars existed? Obviously new car sales would go up if used car sales were quashed.
So what's the difference? That's an honest question.
PepsimanVsJoe said:If I'm 36 and still telling people to "fuck off" over the internet let me know and I'll put a bullet through my skull.
Have you seen what used games look like?arstal said:There's no real incentive for a consumer to buy new that can be done without the publishing crippling the title on purpose through DRM.
There's no real incentive for a consumer to buy new that can be done without the publishing crippling the title on purpose through DRM.
arstal said:A used good has a lower lifespan then a new good. A digital good doesn't realy depreciate, especially if it's data.
There's no real incentive for a consumer to buy new that can be done without the publishing crippling the title on purpose through DRM.