No. Especially nowadays where everybody's following Sony and Microsoft's price hike. All because it's the same grift they pulled off back when the HD era first started. The only difference is now is that they can use covid as an excuse to do all the price hikes. Controllers cost $70 now. The same price as a fucking game. Meaning I'm only going to get these controllers during Black Friday in addition with a gift card or a coupon.But maybe it's too fair?
As much as I like the Completionist, his method ain't exactly foolproof either. It's better than the whole systematic numbers thing. Which never meant anything, but for people to seek validations on their purchases, as those numbers can never fully accumulate someone's true feelings on a game. I said before, economics and everybody has their own value on what's important to them or not. I usually prefer the scale of buy it (with caution and being understanding that everybody has their own financial situation), wait for a sale, wait for a deep sale, rental, "never touch it/some ol' bullshit", and "fuck you" (when the product is really that bad).really like what the Completionist does- he rates games by how much you should play of it. The highest rating is "complete it" which means do all the achievements and hardest difficulty etc, and "finish it" means play through the critical path. That is way more meaningful than 7/10 vs 8/10 or 4 ****. I think there is justification for a similar scale of economics, where the highest rating is MSRP and the lowest rating is "don't even play it if it's literally gifted to you."
Last edited: