The only games I've been paying full price for are games that I have been looking forward to for a very long time/games that I know for a fact I will 200% enjoy. Otherwise I'm waiting for steep sales of at least 50%, but usually more.
The only exception are Nintendo games because they rarely go on sale and when they do it's not a super amazing sale price. But because of that I buy way less Nintendo games and only buy the ones I absolutely know I'll enjoy. It's a lot more rare that I'll take a risk.
Interesting to see so many people with this approach. I think it’s combination of high prices and some AAA duds. Any experienced customer is very wary these days.
I’m very similar. In my mind, I have : £10-20 = with a punt, £20-30 needs to be very well reviewed £30+ Needs to be THE ONE. Rarely more than one or two per years.
I bought NFS heat for like 4 dollars before the new game came out. I'm not even really into racing games, but i played like 10 hours and had some fun with it. The new game came out and was like 79 bucks or something. It seemed pretty mid and was on sale at least twice already for 14 or so dollars. I don't know if i ever loce a game enough to pay full price. Maybe if it's some obline game and my friends want to play.
Pretty much same here. I am a patient gamer, with very few exceptions. Like some Nintendo games, or something highly anticipated (like Helldivers 2 - though I had to postpone buying it)
I'm an extreme patient gamer. I haven't bought a Nintendo/new Nintendo game in a decade. And if I wait long enough, they become remakes/bundles that I also don't buy! And by that time, their games used is super cheap!
Last year, I finally played through all of the Wii Zeldas.
And five years ago, played through all the N64/GAMECUBE/handheld Zeldas!
This is also the age of the B grade game packaged as a triple A. I've downloaded so many games that I play for 5 minutes before realizing it's yet another cheap platform side scroller or a top down, Diablo style game. I'm sick of it, especially cause many of them are charging AAA prices for these turds. Even if the games are ok, they're no more than $20 games packaged at full price.
Alien dark descent comes to mind, it's currently $60 CAD, but after playing it for 10 minutes I can tell you it's not worth more than $5
I do make a few exceptions, but it’s based on the feedback of the preorder people. I played the hell out of Dark Arisen, so I’m sure I’ll fold sooner than later with this one.
I just don’t like this $70 trend, especially when most companies aren’t passing that profit to the people that actually make these games. I want Capcom to be different and stick to their words, but I’m always a skeptic.
And look at that, I'm now considering a video game price review as well, and I've concluded that $70 for a brand new AAA game is stupid and I won't pay that much for a half-asses AAA game.
Tsujimoto went on to argue that an economic slump wouldn't prevent people from purchasing pricier games. “Just because there’s a recession doesn’t mean you won’t go to the movie theater or go to your favorite artist’s concert. High-quality games will continue to sell,” he said.
What I see in this graph is a nosedive in 2020, then things getting normal in 2022 to 2023, and immediately going into nosedive again in the latter half of 2023 with the cost of living crisis.
Frankly, I wouldn't care if cinemas died out completely. Get much better sound and picture quality at home, anyway.
and subsequent culture shift to faster (or day 1) home streaming releases.
So what you're saying is that the graph supports my point counter to Tsujimoto's statement "Just because there’s a recession doesn’t mean you won’t go to the movie theater". People are going to the movie theater less in 2023.
Dragon's Dogma 2, which is scheduled for release this fiscal year, will be priced at $69.99. Industrywide development costs are rising, and we are considering a price review as one option. Ultimately, we intend to take a thoughtful approach in pricing our games while ascertaining user feedback.
Thoughtful approach in this case is taking the development cost into consideration and rising wages for workers (at least they state so). But yeah, the price is going to go up even more
Why do Capcom and most Japanese games have such bad character models? They always look last gen, and the humans look shitty and cartoony. I get a lot of excuses about how graphics aren't that important, but if you want my AAA money, put some damn effort in. Japanese games always look last gen.