PittsburghAfterDark
CAGiversary!
The CC sale obviously inspired this but so did looking at several games recently and their commercial fate. La Pucelle Tactics, dropped to $19.99 at Target, Rallisport Challenge 2 out less than two months and dropped to $29.99, Beyond Good & Evil $19.99 after just a 5 weeks of realse. Christmas games like R: Racing Revolution, Castlevania: LOI from major franchises and gaming powerhouses Namco and Konami dropped to less than $15 each less than 5 months out on the market. Virtua Fighter: Evolution released stateside as a Greatest Hits for $19.99 despite being, arguably, the best fighter on the planet.
These were all "major releases" according to most publications, online gaming forums and hardcore gamers. Yet they all dropped liked rocks in price. I'm not even touching on games that came and went and still aren't selling for >$19.99 like I:Ninja, Goblin Commander, Battlestar Galactica, AvP, Magic: The Gathering and *insert recent game selling for> $19.99. It seems to me if you can wait 6 months for a game $19.99 is the price you'll pay, or less.
My question is how much longer can gaming companies expect to charge $49.99 for a game? Obviously this site and several others are dedicated to cheap gaming. For major franchises like Halo, GTA, Mario, Zelda, Metroid, possibly Sonic and a few others $49.99 seems realistic. Otherwise the new sport in gaming has been betting on bargain bin arrival times. Who would have thought every M$ game released last holiday season would be $29.99 or less and they'd be giving them away with sign ups for XBL?
Are these $4.99 sales wake up calls to publishers? Best Buy seemed to be an anomoly but with CC doing it it's got to be a trend. Can you not see TRU doing this too? I think the $4.99 sale is going to become a summer tradition from here on out. So when will original prices drop to something more realistic to collectors? I mean, yes, we're gamers but we're also collectors, many of us because we can't pass up cheap games. We have stacks of 10-20+ games we've purchased and never played, just because they were cheap?
Okay, I guess I just don't have much to add, this was just another "Can games contintue to sell for $49.99?" thread. My answer is a resounding no. I see gaming more and more staring to mirror the straigt to DVD movie market and less on the traditional priced gaming model. I think we're going to see the popular price point drop to $29.99 for unproven/new titles and $39.99 for true hits. I don't see $49.99 carrying any weight anymore due to the rapid nature of price drops that we've been accostmed to in the last year or two and these massive $4.99 sales where we go buy 10 games or more and pass up every new released game for a couple months because we have a stack of cheap stuff to play.
I'm not crying wolf, I don't see this as the gaming industry being in trouble. I do though see these trends as the end of the $50 per game era.
These were all "major releases" according to most publications, online gaming forums and hardcore gamers. Yet they all dropped liked rocks in price. I'm not even touching on games that came and went and still aren't selling for >$19.99 like I:Ninja, Goblin Commander, Battlestar Galactica, AvP, Magic: The Gathering and *insert recent game selling for> $19.99. It seems to me if you can wait 6 months for a game $19.99 is the price you'll pay, or less.
My question is how much longer can gaming companies expect to charge $49.99 for a game? Obviously this site and several others are dedicated to cheap gaming. For major franchises like Halo, GTA, Mario, Zelda, Metroid, possibly Sonic and a few others $49.99 seems realistic. Otherwise the new sport in gaming has been betting on bargain bin arrival times. Who would have thought every M$ game released last holiday season would be $29.99 or less and they'd be giving them away with sign ups for XBL?
Are these $4.99 sales wake up calls to publishers? Best Buy seemed to be an anomoly but with CC doing it it's got to be a trend. Can you not see TRU doing this too? I think the $4.99 sale is going to become a summer tradition from here on out. So when will original prices drop to something more realistic to collectors? I mean, yes, we're gamers but we're also collectors, many of us because we can't pass up cheap games. We have stacks of 10-20+ games we've purchased and never played, just because they were cheap?
Okay, I guess I just don't have much to add, this was just another "Can games contintue to sell for $49.99?" thread. My answer is a resounding no. I see gaming more and more staring to mirror the straigt to DVD movie market and less on the traditional priced gaming model. I think we're going to see the popular price point drop to $29.99 for unproven/new titles and $39.99 for true hits. I don't see $49.99 carrying any weight anymore due to the rapid nature of price drops that we've been accostmed to in the last year or two and these massive $4.99 sales where we go buy 10 games or more and pass up every new released game for a couple months because we have a stack of cheap stuff to play.
I'm not crying wolf, I don't see this as the gaming industry being in trouble. I do though see these trends as the end of the $50 per game era.