rockykabir
hello
Gaming is big business - with revenues higher than that in the movie industry apparently. But with success, comes the corporate leeches - and rather than it being about making games that people enjoy, it's increasingly becoming about meeting targets :roll:
Classic examples are Microsoft and Sony. IMO, a farce of a console was the PSP - which was none other than a portable version of the PS2 (along with rereleases of its old games) arguably sold to push Sony's inhouse (and profitable) UMD disks and memorystick flash cards
. In fact, it had brought more problems as the low battery life (due to UMD disks) is a major criticism of the PSP. Things don't seem to be changing for the PS3 and Bluray.
Self proclaimed corporate experts Microsoft are doing a similar thing. Overpriced accessories (£60 for a wireless bridge?!, £32 for a controller?!) and XBox Live microtransactions (check out the Godfather and Lumines scandals) are not healthy for the gaming industry. You pay £40-50 for a game and then be told that will have to pay extra for content which should have been in the game in the first place
Shockingly this year, Konami have "done the EA" by rereleasing a direct copy of last years game in PES6. To make it worse, it seems to be unfinished as a lot of content is left out - will Microsoft be using microtransactions?
But at the same time, I guess the extra finances have helped the graphical quality of games - but is it worth the games companies selling their souls to the devil and us spending the extra money? :shock: :mrgreen:
Classic examples are Microsoft and Sony. IMO, a farce of a console was the PSP - which was none other than a portable version of the PS2 (along with rereleases of its old games) arguably sold to push Sony's inhouse (and profitable) UMD disks and memorystick flash cards

Self proclaimed corporate experts Microsoft are doing a similar thing. Overpriced accessories (£60 for a wireless bridge?!, £32 for a controller?!) and XBox Live microtransactions (check out the Godfather and Lumines scandals) are not healthy for the gaming industry. You pay £40-50 for a game and then be told that will have to pay extra for content which should have been in the game in the first place

Shockingly this year, Konami have "done the EA" by rereleasing a direct copy of last years game in PES6. To make it worse, it seems to be unfinished as a lot of content is left out - will Microsoft be using microtransactions?
But at the same time, I guess the extra finances have helped the graphical quality of games - but is it worth the games companies selling their souls to the devil and us spending the extra money? :shock: :mrgreen: