The Price of next gen games.
The Price of next gen games.
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Bullett

Original Poster:

11,131 posts

207 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
quotequote all
I was looking at the exclusives for each of the next gen games and noticed they are considerably more expensive than the current gen. Anywhere from £7 to £15 more for some titles and this is not just exclusives but cross platform, some being PC/current/next at £30, £40 and £50 respectively.

Are they just taking the piss, will prices drop after launch or are they gouging? I can't see a reason why they would cost more to produce, they just seem to be looking to charge more.

Mind you I always remember PS3 games being about £40 so prices haven't changed and maybe they should. 37% is a bit excessive though.

mu0n

2,348 posts

156 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
quotequote all
Bullett said:
I was looking at the exclusives for each of the next gen games and noticed they are considerably more expensive than the current gen. Anywhere from £7 to £15 more for some titles and this is not just exclusives but cross platform, some being PC/current/next at £30, £40 and £50 respectively.

Are they just taking the piss, will prices drop after launch or are they gouging? I can't see a reason why they would cost more to produce, they just seem to be looking to charge more.

Mind you I always remember PS3 games being about £40 so prices haven't changed and maybe they should. 37% is a bit excessive though.
I don't buy many games but I'm pretty sure that the majority of games sold in supermarkets and other big stores are marked down from the RRP.

For example, GTA V is £49.99 RRP but the price in Tesco was about £40.

motorizer

1,537 posts

194 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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Bullett said:
I can't see a reason why they would cost more to produce,
I thought GTAV was the most expensive game ever made? Games are constantly getting more and more expensive to produce.

Having said that, I haven't payed full price for one in ages, steam sales for me....(or occasionally aplha funding)

Edited by motorizer on Thursday 17th October 12:29

Steve Evil

10,801 posts

252 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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It was the same story when the 360 and PS3 launched, prices soon tumble.

Jasandjules

71,973 posts

252 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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I must say I resent paying £40 a game, let alone £50!!

I tend to wait until I've found them cheaper.... Though I have pre-ordered BF4.....

P-Jay

11,250 posts

214 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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Steve Evil said:
It was the same story when the 360 and PS3 launched, prices soon tumble.
This, they haven't even launched yet, they'll no doubt come with the same £49.99 rrp as current ones and be actually sold for about £35 once the initial excitement has died down - I'd bet inflation corrected games are cheaper now than that any time since they came on cassettes.

KarlMac

4,616 posts

164 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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motorizer said:
I thought GTAV was the most expensive game ever made? Games are constantly getting more and more expensive to produce.

Having said that, I haven't payed full price for one in ages, steam sales for me....(or occasionally aplha funding)

Edited by motorizer on Thursday 17th October 12:29
It was, but it also smashed $1billion is 3 days, 2 weeks sooner than the previous record.

There will be significant costs by the game makers gearing up for next gen. Ubisoft are looking at loosing $54mil this year.

Bullett

Original Poster:

11,131 posts

207 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
quotequote all
Doesn't matter how expensive a game is to develop if it's spread over all the consoles and the PC say. You actually spread the costs thinner so there is no reason for a £10 price difference between versions, except they can get away with it.

I think the pricing will drop, but it never likely to drop as low as current gen. Something called anchor pricing as I understand it. Set an anchor price and that is what people will expect to pay. So when it drops a fiver people then think bargin even though its still £5 more expensive than the last gen.

PC games have been around £30 for years. There is no sea change in the market to more this established price.

Big Fat Fatty

3,312 posts

179 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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I remember PS2 and 360 games both starting around the £50 mark when the consoles were launched.

CBR JGWRR

6,577 posts

172 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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Big Fat Fatty said:
I remember PS2 and 360 games both starting around the £50 mark when the consoles were launched.
And on average it's about 2 quid for the former now.

130R

7,003 posts

229 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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This is one advantage of PC gaming, I can't remember the last time I paid over £30 for a game. The flip side being the cost of a gaming PC vs a console.

daddy cool

4,093 posts

252 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
quotequote all
mu0n said:
For example, GTA V is £49.99 RRP but the price in Tesco was about £40.
It was £33 delivered on launch day (from Tesco)...
No reason to pay full price, just shop around, and then see if you can buy via quidco for additional savings.

I have a PS3 but now I have GTA5 im in no rush for a PS4. I do most of my gaming on the PC and love the fact games are so cheap. I think they have to keep them at a realistic price because its so easy to get the game off torrents.

As a BF3 fan I laughed when it came to ordering the forthcoming BF4 game direct from EA. £45 for the physical disc. Ok. Now the PC download version? £45 too. Riiight, so it costs you nothing to make the discs, manual and ship the product? So I ordered it from Amazon for £31 delivered. (I see they have dropped the price of the download version to £40 now, and amazon price has actually risen to £35)

Rick101

7,147 posts

173 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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I grew up with sonic and mario, games were £30 back then.

I really don't see the minimal increase over 20 years as much of an issue.

motorizer

1,537 posts

194 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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130R said:
This is one advantage of PC gaming, I can't remember the last time I paid over £30 for a game. The flip side being the cost of a gaming PC vs a console.
The flip side is also DRM, Whilst they are cheaper, with most PC games these days you can't sell it on once registered on steam or equivalent. There is still a market for second hand console games. (I don't know if the new consoles will have this type of DRM, I'm sure sony and microsoft would want it)


Games (and gaming PCs) are one of the few things that haven't massively increased in price..... wasn't elite for the BBC micro around £15 30 years ago?



Edited by motorizer on Thursday 17th October 19:16

DoctorX

8,025 posts

190 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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An Atari 2600 game was 30 quid 30 years ago, pretty sure a lot of N64 games were >£40. Suppose we can't complain. Much.

Bullett

Original Poster:

11,131 posts

207 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
quotequote all
You are right. I had to save up for ages to buy Elite (for my Electron) it was £15 in 1984! That seems to be the equivalent of £41 in todays money. Pretty close to what we pay now but also most games were £10 or under.

The effort is of course much greater now but then the customer base is also larger.

130R

7,003 posts

229 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
quotequote all
motorizer said:
with most PC games these days you can't sell it on once registered on steam or equivalent
True, steam "family sharing" is in beta at the moment though and with that you can share your entire steam library with up to 10 devices at a given time. This will probably save a fair bit of money assuming you know other people that use steam:

http://store.steampowered.com/sharing/

anonymous-user

77 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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Neogeo were 150 plus...

130R

7,003 posts

229 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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DoctorX said:
An Atari 2600 game was 30 quid 30 years ago, pretty sure a lot of N64 games were >£40. Suppose we can't complain. Much.
Also when you think about the amount of time you can spend playing a game - you can easily put 100+ hours into a game like Skyrim, Battlefield and CoD multiplayer (for example) even more.

Olivera

8,506 posts

262 months

Thursday 17th October 2013
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Rick101 said:
I grew up with sonic and mario, games were £30 back then.

I really don't see the minimal increase over 20 years as much of an issue.
Mega-drive and Super NES games were regularly £40 back in the early 90s, yet probably cost several orders of magnitude less to develop than todays titles. If anything we should be rejoicing how little (if any) they have gone up over the past 20 years.