- Joined
- Nov 3, 2013
- Messages
- 2,141 (0.53/day)
- Location
- Serbia
Processor | Ryzen 5600 |
---|---|
Motherboard | X570 I Aorus Pro |
Cooling | Deepcool AG400 |
Memory | HyperX Fury 2 x 8GB 3200 CL16 |
Video Card(s) | RX 6700 10GB SWFT 309 |
Storage | SX8200 Pro 512 / NV2 512 |
Display(s) | 24G2U |
Case | NR200P |
Power Supply | Ion SFX 650 |
Mouse | G703 (TTC Gold 60M) |
Keyboard | Keychron V1 (Akko Matcha Green) / Apex m500 (Gateron milky yellow) |
Software | W10 |
In the '90s a $60 game was the full experience. With a possible $30 expansion pack that was in most cases 50% of the full game. $90 total. No bullshit.When people complain about the price of a $60 game and the price of it's additional content, it's as if they don't know about inflation.
Games were $60 back in 1999, companies still ask $60 for games in 2018.
https://www.dollartimes.com/inflation/inflation.php?amount=60&year=1999
In 1999, $60 today is $90.25. You're getting more for your money now than ever. And also realize that the cost for the developers to create this stuff has increased as well. Any idea on the size of the team working on Black Ops 4?
Today you pay $60 for a broken down experience, with content that was made long time ago but cut into segments, dished out to you on a small spoon, loot crates to promote gambling, cosmetic microtransactions that used to come in old games by default and easily just from playing, preorder bonuses, DLCs that separate player base, so called expansions for $10-20 that have less content than half the Soviet campaign in Yuri's Revenge.
If you add everything together, you get a product that costs the consumer more than $100. And still most likely has less content than the game + exp from the '90s or early 2000s.
And let's not get into the fact how with todays software, game making became much much easier. Or the fact, they dish out franchise sequels annually. Do you really think they make every Assassins Creed from scratch. Every year. Or CoD, or BF.
BFV is literally a reskined BF1. In the old days that would have been a $20 expansion.