[quote="GamesIndustry"]"Now you've shown that the industry won't stand up to you, everyone else can copy this practice," he wrote on his website. "Let me go make you exclusive content, let me advertise to send buyers into your store, let me pay to put standees and posters everywhere, so you can sell them used games and stab our industry in the back."Hexagon_777
Read the full article here.
Yet another article discussing the demise of retail and how digital distribution is the future. Is this a sign that developers are seeing the light? Are developers feeling threatened by Toys R Us dipping its toes into the pre-owned videogames market or by Amazon entering the pre-owned games market? Is this why Capcom is trying to lead in digital distribution or why digital distribution is to rule in the next year or two?
So many questions! Will you be able to answer them all? :o
I am NEVER one who buys into the "DD is the future" hype. I have said many times before that people hyping up DD are playing into the hands of internet providers just looking for an excuse to further restrict, control and gauge for internet access. I have also said many times how the only people i know personally who hype DD are people who steal everything (movies, music, digital books, tv shows, etc) and therefore won't be supporting DD regardless of whether it becomes the future or not. So why do they care.
This is the first time I've heard the arguement about ending used game sales...and it is probably the best and smartest arguement yet. THIS is a totally legitimate and honest point. DD taking off would kill the used game market.
I'm still not sure I totally believe it, though. People who buy used games are clearly looking for cheap games to buy. They don't want to pay full retail price, which supposedly retail STORES barely make any money off anyway. So if developers want to attract the "cheap" gamer audience, then they are going to have to have sales or drop the price of games. And if developers are willing to sell the game at a break-even point, or even a loss, then are they really gaining anything? Is this really getting them some sort of benefit they didn't already get from people buying used games? I don't think so. I think the only way this arguement works is if developers are able to make money off cheap games or game sales.
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