Jamie McKane
MyGaming Journalist
The South African pricing of Microsoft's "Play Anywhere" games is ridiculous
Is this the start of console pricing for PC games?
Is this the start of console pricing for PC games?
Well... you're effectively getting two games (or platforms) for a single price. I don't really see an issue with it, the avg console game is ~R900 and the avg PC game is ~R600 so therefor the total would be ~R1500.
Forza Horizon 3 is R999, so win-win.
But are you? Will I be able to play the game at the same time on both platforms? If the answer is yes, your analysis is justified...if the answer is no...well then you just admitted pc games cost R600 and these are way above that, seeing as these are already available on xbox no? only pc people will be buying this, or have I missed something?![]()
But are you? Will I be able to play the game at the same time on both platforms? If the answer is yes, your analysis is justified...if the answer is no...well then you just admitted pc games cost R600 and these are way above that, seeing as these are already available on xbox no? only pc people will be buying this, or have I missed something?![]()
At any single point in time, you may only sign into the game on one Xbox One console or one Windows 10 PC. You cannot be signed into the same game on both an Xbox One console and a Windows 10 PC at the same time.
Well then the real question is why the hell are console games so damn expensive o_0
It's always been the case. Granted they have escalated over time.
So there you have it. You get a console game at console game price that you can play on your PC as well.
Gaming as a whole is becoming too expensive. It's my main hobby, and I love gaming but if I look at my purchases this year...well over R10 000 for games? That's insane and it's getting to a point where I just won't buy games on release.
Let's not even get started on the pricing of gaming hardware.
Before anyone preaches how they never buy anything on release...That's great..I'm happy for you.
Thanks man, I'm glad that you are happy for me.
But then I do buy some games at release. Like I'll get Syberia 3 at release and probably the next Mass Effect.
The games are retailing for $60 in the USA. That means that converted to a generally accepted average exchange rate of 14.50, we get a price of R870 per game. Much lower than the R1k price of the start game. But, if we add VAT to the mix of 14%, we get a price of R991.8. Pretty close to that R1k price mark. I wonder if this isn't the sign that we are now getting taxed on online goods...it may be a coincidence, but it seems rather odd that it calculates that well
You've hit the nail on the head. Whenever I try to explain to people that distributors are not trying to fleece us, however, I get told I'm a corporate sympathiser.
Which is weird since most of our distributors aren't big hulking corporates. But I digress.
Something I've found interesting is that Microsoft-published games have typically been more expensive in South Africa than titles that other distributors handle. Back in the good old days when PC games were R299, Dungeon Siege (GPG, but MS published) was priced at R399.
Also take into account that most of our tech and gaming imports happen in Euro, with some in Pound.
This is also relevant for downloads/digital purchases because as far as I know, local prices for platforms like Origin, PlayStation, and the Microsoft store are set by their European branches.
European gamers have been complaining bitterly over the years because for EU pricing publishers simply flip the $ sign to a Euro despite exchange and purchasing power disparities.
The fact that PC games have been cheaper than console titles in South Africa all these years is actually a bit of an anomaly. In most major markets I've checked, new games cost the same whether you buy them for console or PC.
But yeah it makes sense. I've always thought that PC gaming prices has been exceptionally low due to the fact that Steam almost gives us access to circumvent SARS and the tax man by in affect "buying games from outside the country, and import them via the internet tax free". It pretty much comes down to exactly that, as I understand the whole market.
If we look at a previous article you did on the digital prices of games at EA, THIS ARTICLE HERE, this clearly shows that EA has their digital prices for all games much lower than that of the physical copies. It is extremely interesting to note that the price difference pretty much is 14% between that of the physical and the digital copies.
I wonder if EA didn't actually forget to add tax on their games, which is why we see the increase in prices in the past week or so, and this is why the prices of Microsoft Play Anywhere games are so much higher than other PC games via Steam.
Bloody corporate sympathiser in this thread.
No I think the mistake was much bigger than just forgetting tax. I wonder if they didn't just use last year's prices for new releases instead of doing new currency conversions, or checking with their physical retail departments what local wholesale prices they offered to Prima.