Dragon Age Ultimate Edition
Oct. 1st, 2010 05:15 amThis
This kind of shows exactly how game publishers are suckerpunching gamers this generation in order to make them pay more for a Full Game. DAUE has all the DLC and stuff wrapped up into it. I'm not entirely sure how the DLC is added, if it's pre-installed on the discs (You'd think that'd be the smart thing to do right? I honestly don't know.) or if they're just going to include a free coupon the way some Game of the Year editions have started to take.
The Ultimate Edition is going to retail the same as a normal New Release I believe. So about 60 dollars. To have bought all the content in this package before this it would have cost you approximately $114. One hundred, fourteen dollars. Those nickels and dimes sure add up. That's what you get for buying "beta-ware". ;)
Oh I like that term. I'm going to use it from now on for current games. >:)
For my part, I obviously don't have the game yet. (Don't have a PS3/360/Wii, and only buying cheap titles for now so I have lots to play by the time I do get them)
If the DLC is pre-installed - no download necessary - then I will likely add the game to my To Buy list. I would have been seriously pissed however if I had previously bought the game full price, regardless of if I had also bought the DLC separately.
This kind of shows exactly how game publishers are suckerpunching gamers this generation in order to make them pay more for a Full Game. DAUE has all the DLC and stuff wrapped up into it. I'm not entirely sure how the DLC is added, if it's pre-installed on the discs (You'd think that'd be the smart thing to do right? I honestly don't know.) or if they're just going to include a free coupon the way some Game of the Year editions have started to take.
The Ultimate Edition is going to retail the same as a normal New Release I believe. So about 60 dollars. To have bought all the content in this package before this it would have cost you approximately $114. One hundred, fourteen dollars. Those nickels and dimes sure add up. That's what you get for buying "beta-ware". ;)
Oh I like that term. I'm going to use it from now on for current games. >:)
For my part, I obviously don't have the game yet. (Don't have a PS3/360/Wii, and only buying cheap titles for now so I have lots to play by the time I do get them)
If the DLC is pre-installed - no download necessary - then I will likely add the game to my To Buy list. I would have been seriously pissed however if I had previously bought the game full price, regardless of if I had also bought the DLC separately.
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Date: 2010-10-01 01:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2010-10-02 05:25 am (UTC)But, as you say, for anyone who has already bought the original game and all of the DLC, or even just some of it, this is indeed a complete rip-off. Early adopters almost always get burned, in the end.
This is why, for example, I'm holding out on Starcraft 2 and will wait and get it when all three parts of the whole game are released and bundled together into a single package, which will likely end up costing the same as a normal full game (i.e. one-third of what it will cost now, if you get each part separately, as soon as they are released). I don't need to play Starcraft 2 that badly at the moment.
It was the same with the Orange Box. They released Half-Life 2, for the price of a full game. Then they released Episode 1 for almost the price of a full game. Then they released the Orange Box, which contained Half-Life 2, Episode 1, Episode 2, Portal, and Team Fortress 2, all for the price of a single full game. Anyone who already had Half-Life 2 and Episode 1 were screwed over, given that they cancelled the Black Box (http://pc.ign.com/articles/790/790013p1.html), which was to have only contained the new content, but at a smaller price. I'm glad I didn't jump on the Half-Life 2 bandwagon when it first came out. The only thing is that you'd be missing out on playing a game like that when it first comes out, and in many cases that just doesn't matter all that much to me. Some games I am willing to go ahead and pay full price for just the base game, even knowing that I'll probably get burned later on*, but most of the time I don't care if I get to play the game right on release day or not.
Oh and wait, didn't a lot of publishers/devs and forum-retards say something along the lines of games never degrading in value, which was part of their argument for why used games are so evil? Hmmmmm....
* - I'm looking at you, Fable and Jade Empire (http://kane-magus.livejournal.com/82647.html). Hell, Morrowind as well, for that matter, given that I (re)bought the Game of the Year edition in order to get the Tribunal and Bloodmoon expansions, even though I already had the original Morrowind. So yeah, as Kern said, this has already been going on for quite a long time. But, as you said, it has always sucked (unless you were one of the "lucky" ones who didn't buy the game when it launched). I guess the way to go is to wait until the "Game of the Year Super-dandy Ultimate Edition" of a given game is released, and then wait some more until that hits bargain bin price.
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