I’ve read the whole thread and not sure exactly where I stand on this. My personal thoughts may be a little random, so bear with me. Maybe I will reach an actual viewpoint by the end.
On one hand, games are indeed a luxury item and should be a discretionary item, as such. When someone is not well off or has fallen on hard times, and every dollar (I will just use that term, dollar, for easy reference) counts, then spending money on games will not improve your situation. That money is better spent on slowly but surely saving every dollar you can so that one can lift themselves up.
25 years ago I had left active duty army service after 4.5 years (I continued till 14 years in the Reserves). My job prospects were horrible in the expensive state of Vermont, so I took whatever I could, even working 3 jobs. Wife and a son, with another on the way, I still couldn’t make it. We moved into public housing, got food stamps for about 6 months, and saved every dime I could. I bought no CD’s (yeah, that’s the time period, LOL), had no cable, went to no movies. Finally with alot of hard work and getting a good job here in Louisiana, I was able to keep the creditors at bay and handle the necessities.
Even then, there weren’t many extras. Saved some more, worked as many hours as I could and finally bought our first house, just a small one. It wasn’t until 2005 that I finally had enough income to actually have discretionary income. Suddenly we could go to movies, get all the cable channels, and only then did I really start buying PC games. Now, after 22 years in that job I had worked hard enough that I was able to retire early today.
What’s my point? Well that lesson should apply to those hard working people that are not well off at the moment, and who are in what we may call the more affluent countries. Yes, it sucks giving up nice little luxuries like games. But the payoff in the long run IS there. This is related to why I used to give away games here. I felt that people who put their names in probably had a harder time buying them new, so why not give them some of those luxury items to make their free time better without a financial burden.
Do I think this same model applies to people in what we term less affluent countries? No, because even my example may not work for them. So for those countries I believe in regional pricing. Reason being is that many may be somewhat comparable to a situation like mine in their country, but at a lower income level. So even those people who are doing all the things I did, aren’t going to be able to reap the rewards and buy for instance, nice games. They should have regional pricing. They deserve leisure activities too. There also should be some system in place to keep people from more affluent countries from cheating the system and buying their games cheaply on regional pricing models. This can only hurt our fellow humans in those countries.
So, in both situations, when times are extremely tight, buying games is not going to improve your financial situation. But once it has improved, and there is discretionary income, Everyone should be able to only buy games from their region. Basically I see it from both sides.