Actually, it (kinda) makes sense to price games at $49.99. Though they lose out on $10 of profits and can make a huge difference in blockbuster, triple-A games, it incises people to buy more games. Gaming as it is ain't cheap, and the more games we buy = the game industry growing.
Remember, guys, I want:
Ace Combat 7
Metroid V / Dread
Call of Duty 10 (hey, you gotta have Call of Duty anyways; plus, hating on Call of Duty is childish, considering they're actually GOOD games compared to Guitar Hero)
Tales of _______
Resident Evil 6
Darksiders II
Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Online
Rayman Legends
Retro Studios' new game
Also, I want Nintendo to get me into their online gaming network. Kid Icarus: Uprising was an excellent start. Oh, and remame the eShop on Wii U the uShop. Get it? U Shop?
...
It's funny. You're supposed to laugh. No, wait - COME BACK! WAIT! NOOOOOOO - cough
On topic, I want Nintendo to deliver with a good online store / network, great games, and possibly lowered prices. Maybe on the $49.99 mark?
Metroid, Xenoblade, EarthBound shill
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Gaming as it is ain't cheap, and the more games we buy = the game industry growing.
That's possibly the most flawed economic strategy I've ever seen. It's one we see often enough, and it's precisely what the games industry is trying to encourage, but it's flawed and unsustainable at its very core.
The industry needs to figure out how to incentivise people to spend more money on games, not encourage the devaluation of the medium.
Wii U RPG by Monolift Soft. My 3DS satisfies every other itch except that.
Whether I buy a Wii U or not really boils down to a steady stream of games that interest me, better third party support and whether the console has other features that make me want to use it when I'm not playing games. Something like better online or a unique feature like streetpass was for the 3DS.
Gaming as it is ain't cheap, and the more games we buy = the game industry growing.
That's possibly the most flawed economic strategy I've ever seen. It's one we see often enough, and it's precisely what the games industry is trying to encourage, but it's flawed and unsustainable at its very core.
The industry needs to figure out how to incentivise people to spend more money on games, not encourage the devaluation of the medium.
It's called the Angry Birds strategy
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"Don't stir the pot" is a nice way of saying "they're too dumb to reason with"
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Topic: What will be the "selling point" for you?
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