when will these AAA publisher/devs realize that the market isnt here to please them, they are here to please the market
state of decay fastest selling game on Xbox live and its on its why to aut sell minecraft.nodlimax said:Exactly! They're wasting millions in marketing and huge development teams to shorten development times. At the same time as soon as the focus goes "broad audience" you can see that in most cases there is absolutely no real challenge in the game and the mechanics are just downright insulting to real gamers.MasterOfHisOwnDomain said:The development costs and the prices that the consumer is expected to pay. That's what has got to change."When I see studio after studio closing and the aforementioned alluded titles failing I know something's got to change."
And no 50 Million marketing budgets are not necessary to market a game for "gamers". Real gamers read about new developments themselves and are going to buy good and interesting games.
That would also explain why Gamestop get's the best retailer specific pre-order dlc. If everyone is so worried about gamestop, why not put all the cool pre-order dlc on the digital download version? That's something they could've been doing for years. We already know that MS will spend millions to make dlc exclusive to their console for a short period of time.tdylan said:Except Jim already covered why Publishers are afraid to make digital cheaper than disc - the fear of reprisal that will come about as a result of undercutting/undermining retailers such as gamestop. According to Jim, there is still too much money being made from Brick & Mortar sales for publishers to ignore. They're depending on gamestop etc to take preorders, sell consoles, and digital copies. They're not going to risk gamestop ordering less titles due to more enticing digital day one sales overshadowing them"...Day One Digital will (hopefully) be cheaper and will have so many added bells and whistles that consumers (with reliable enough bandwidth) will have a hard time refusing the tasty downloadable edition over the disc based one.
This from man who doesn't see how pushing to kill used games is nothing more than a pitiful stopgap of an attempt to deal with ballooning game budgets.StewShearer said:internet pitchfork mob who can only see 6 inches in front of their face,
There are millions of gamers just like kamay. I'm one of them too. We have a 100GB cap, shared between five people, so maybe I can download one or two games.kamay said:Digital for me just isn't doable for the amount of games I like to play (I don't do multiplayer so I have more time for other games). My download bandwidth is capped at 80gigs a month and is expensive to upgrade. I download a game like Bioshock Infinite and guess what, 30% of my monthly bandwidth is gone right there. That maybe not seem like a lot but with the general browsing of myself and other people in my house I'd get pretty darn close to breaking the cap. I like to play more than one game a month plus I also have a library of physical games dating back to my NES days.
Digital is fine for little indie games or people who don't have a cap, but the next gen games are probably going to be sitting at the 15-24gig range. Also my internet is fast but I really don't want to wait 1-2 hours to download a game, there's a Game Stop within a 5 minute walk of my house and 3 within a 5-10 minute drive.
You're not. Hell, I just went out to the bookstore last week to pick up the box collection of A Song of Ice and Fire Books 1-4 + A Dance with Dragons and a few Terry Pratchett novels. Sadly it seems that more and more people are turning digital these days though. Of course, I've been parroting the same thing so much the past few days that I feel like a broken record, but suffice to say that I find digital more convenient on my PC, which is usually connected to the internet, and I like physical disks for my consoles, which are never connected to the internet--Partly because of the way I grew up and partly because practically everyone else in my family has been a collector and hoarder.Bix96 said:Am I the only one left on the planet who likes physical media? I'm proud to look at my bookshelves full of games dating all the way back to the NES and when my friends bring their kindles over and say "look I've got like 100 books on this thing" it seems so lame.
This basically sums it up. The industry seem to have forgotten we don't owe them shit.Scrumpmonkey said:The industry has a strange habit of blaming the consumer for it's own shortcomings.