Steamをインストール
ログイン
|
言語
简体中文(簡体字中国語)
繁體中文(繁体字中国語)
한국어 (韓国語)
ไทย (タイ語)
български (ブルガリア語)
Čeština(チェコ語)
Dansk (デンマーク語)
Deutsch (ドイツ語)
English (英語)
Español - España (スペイン語 - スペイン)
Español - Latinoamérica (スペイン語 - ラテンアメリカ)
Ελληνικά (ギリシャ語)
Français (フランス語)
Italiano (イタリア語)
Bahasa Indonesia(インドネシア語)
Magyar(ハンガリー語)
Nederlands (オランダ語)
Norsk (ノルウェー語)
Polski (ポーランド語)
Português(ポルトガル語-ポルトガル)
Português - Brasil (ポルトガル語 - ブラジル)
Română(ルーマニア語)
Русский (ロシア語)
Suomi (フィンランド語)
Svenska (スウェーデン語)
Türkçe (トルコ語)
Tiếng Việt (ベトナム語)
Українська (ウクライナ語)
翻訳の問題を報告
I mean I read this and I wonder...
Games still go on sale. And I can't help but think, adjusted for inflation I paid like $140 for Super Mario RPG in 1996, I believe it was priced at $69.95 (but a part of my crappy memory says it may have been $79.95) either price was worth it for how much I liked the game, and how much I played it.
Games may not be able to maintain $50-60 forever and arguably because of inflation that price is pretty depressed.
I have a poster on my wall of the old Atari Centipede for the Atari 2600 I cut out of a magazine back in the day. Bottom right corner it says "RRP £29.99".
At that time, the average weekly wage was under £100. So over a quarter of a whole weekly wage for a game.
That was about 1982. By the time the PS1 was out, and I was writing for certain magazines, I was privy to certain bits of wholesale information, and PS1 games were RRP'ed at £29.99-39.99 depending. The priofit margins were terrible though as you bought them in at about £27 (unless you could buy hundreds of copies, which is why supermarkets did well).
So just like other products, they bear no realtion to inflation.
Music for example, wen t DOWN in price once other things like Napster came around.
In the 1980s when CDs took off, and I was DJing, CDs were £11.99, unless they were on offer (usually bought in bulk and in the chart) you could get them at £9.99 for a while. This largely stayed until the 1990s, when things moved to £12.99.
This stayed until Naptser and digital distrubution screwed over the idiot publishers, then CDs dropped to between £6.99 for chart ones and £9.99 for others.
Yay!!!! XDDD