ADXC wrote:When I got games, Sega Genesis were $20, PS2 were $50, and now PS3 are $60. And I don't really care about the past.
You must have been buying used Sega Genesis games because Genesis games were 50-60 dollars a pop, just like SNES games, although SNES games shot up in price mid-life cycle (I remember Super Mario All-Stars was SEVENTY dollars brand new, I got it for my birthday and I was reminded I would not get as many Christmas presents because of how much it cost).
What's interesting is that it actually costs more to make a cartridge than a CD, meaning game companies earned a LOT less profit for selling SNES games for 70 dollars than a PS3 game for 50 dollars.
You say you don't care about the past, that's fine. I have no obligation to educate you in how good you have it as far as game prices these days. If you honestly want to believe the mean ol' game companies are being greedy and charging too much, then you're welcome to join the ranks of pirates. Hey, I've pirated stuff before too, I won't lie. Though normally the stuff I pirate is stuff not for sale either because it won't be brought over to the States or it's so old.
But games cost what they cost for a REASON, games are CHEAPER, and if you still want to whine about it, you'll excuse me if I have zero sympathy. If you don't like what they cost, don't buy them, it's as simple as that. But quit pretending like game companies "owe" you somehow, or that they're not entitled to a profit.
blkmage wrote:Are you guys seriously discouraging people from buying used games?
No, I actually encourage it. I buy used games all the time. What I'm discouraging is say, for example, Halo 4 comes out and a person goes into Gamestop two days after launch date and buys a used copy for 10 or 20 dollars less than a new game. I discourage that because there's no reason for it other than to save a couple of bucks. And if people are complaining that game prices are too high (which they're not), then buying used isn't going to get their point across. The only way to get their point across is to not buy it in the first place.
If you're not pirating anything, then you, as the consumer, shouldn't have to go out of your way to make up for other peoples' pirating.
I agree completely. Despite what the game industry thinks, pirates do not count as "lost sales." They were never sales in the first place, so they don't count as losses.
And the sale price of games isn't making up for pirating. DRM is what does that. Trust me, if game companies wanted to make up for piracy games would be 100+ dollars.
If you want to go and just give money to the industry for no reason (by not optimizing your spending power), then go ahead and do that, since it's your money.
"No reason?" So wanting the company to NOT go bankrupt so they can make more games I enjoy is no reason? I don't know about you, but I know I don't want companies to not be able to turn a profit and therefore be unable to make more games. Perhaps I'm crazy, but I actually LIKE to play new games. I actually want companies to make more of them. But I guess I'm just "crazy," they must have money trees in game companies that give them funding for new games to be made, right? So I'm just a sucker I guess!
But no one should feel like they need to go out of their way to do that by avoiding things that won't give the maximum amount of money to industry.
Sigh. This isn't my argument. If I wanted people to give the maximum amount of money to the industry then I would say "Buy every new game that comes out!" Crappy games don't deserve to be bought. If a game sucks, don't buy it! If a game doesn't appeal to you, don't buy it!
What I'm saying is this. I like Dragon Quest V. I bought a brand new copy launch date. Why? One, because I like Dragon Quest and I want Square to make more. Two, because the more sales Square makes, the more likely they are to say "Hey, these games are selling well, so let's bring more to America!"
I could download it online, or buy a used copy for 20 bucks cheaper two days later. But then maybe the sales aren't so good, huh? Maybe then Square says "Y'know, people aren't buying this, let's not bring any more Dragon Quest games to America." Then what?
Keep in mind if this is like two years after Dragon Quest V came out, Square isn't producing any more copies of the game. If you find a used copy, buy it! Because the game isn't being made, sales aren't being tracked anymore, and so on. It doesn't really matter at that point.
I didn't buy the Orange Box until it was on Steam for $10 during that weekend sale in April this year. I hadn't played any of it before then, including Half-Life 2. Am I a worse gamer because I didn't buy it on launch day for $60?
Online distribution is a bit different from buying games at the store. It's much easier to track, and the profit is greater since there isn't as much to produce. It's a lot cheaper to send data on an internet line than it is to make a disc, an instruction manual, a game box, and so on. This is why Virtual Console games are around 5-10 dollars instead of 60-70 dollars like they used to be.
No, you're not a worse gamer. Your example doesn't even really count, because since you bought it off Steam, you weren't buying a used copy and thus money still went to the industry. A better question would be something like, "I didn't buy God of War II until Gamestop had a Gamer's Day sale this year and I got a used copy for 20 dollars, am I a worse gamer because I didn't buy it on launch day?" The answer is still no though, because at this point the game is no longer in production.
By the way, the price of games DO go down legitimately, ever heard of the "Greatest Hits" line where really popular games that sold really well have a retail price of 20 dollars? That's like Sony saying "Hey, we made a really good profit off this game, so we'll reduce the price because profit isn't as important now."
I'm not a video game industry shill, hell, I'm not even a computer programmer. I'm just a gamer who likes games and realizes how an economy works. I want games to keep being made, I don't want good game companies to go out of business because someone wants to be whiny about how cheap games are. Yes, there ARE game companies out there who deserve to go under, and that I won't buy any products from because of their underhanded tactics *coughEAcough*.
But if the problem is with the companies themselves, then don't buy any games, period, used or not. Don't try and compromise your morals by saying "Well used copies don't give money to the company so if I buy one I can still play it and they won't get money!" If you honestly think a game is good enough to buy? Then support the makers. If you think the company is charging too much or treating consumers poorly? THEN DON'T BUY THEIR GAMES, USED OR NOT. Otherwise you're a hypocrite. So this whole "if a person thinks games are too expensive" (which again, they are NOT) excuse as to why they should buy used games two days after launch is nothing more than a nice-sounding lie.