Game prices for the past 30 years haven’t kept pace with inflation.

I recognise the argument that publishers are shifting larger volumes of units now, which has been a factor that has allowed the industry to keep price increases below inflation for the last 30 years.

Wages not being even close to keeping up with inflation (especially housing inflation) is the real issue here, not the $70/$80 video game.

You should be angry at your reduced purchasing power in all of society, not just with the price of Nintendo games.

(Secondary less unpopular opinion, the best games out these days are multiplatform and released at least 5 years ago, buy them for << $80 and wait for sale the new releases, when they too are 5 years old)

  • @antimidas@sopuli.xyz
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    35 days ago

    Yep, and truth be told if I had the option of paying 90 € for an actual physical copy without microtransactions, DLC instead of having all content in the game from launch, no online access required and no copy protection on the disc, I’d gladly pay that. 100 € even, if it’s a particularly good game.

    But I have zero trust in that being the case with the increased prices, it’s just going to be the same thing we now have, more expensively.

    • Lightor
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      15 days ago

      Hell ya, I would, too, 100%. Imagine actually owning a game with all of the content on a disk you can share and resell.

      I agree with you, though; there is no incentive for companies to do this; they would make less money and have less control over the content. They can’t stand that.