(But it’s also heavily on sale right now, for $15 - https://store.steampowered.com/app/526870/Satisfactory/)

Personally, I don’t mind at all. For one I bought it at $30, but also I have 2,000 hours logged. Per hour that’s a cost of $0.02 per hour (at the new price) if I had bought it at $40. I’m all for calling out studios like ubisoft for being greedy, but coffee stain has done a very fair job with Satisfactory IMO, and they very well deserve $10 more for the game.

That being said, go pick it up now for $15

  • CaptainEffort
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    5 months ago

    By that logic any game that gets updated should have its price increase. No Mans Sky should cost like $100.

    • jeeva@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Yes, and?

      Trying to make money from games with long term support is a tricky thing that companies keep trying to do - it can lead to season passes, microtransactions, deluxe/supporter editions, buyable maps and expansions - or stuff like this.

      Companies try to get money to support game, more news at eleven…

      • CaptainEffort
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        5 months ago

        Maybe games as a service shouldn’t be a thing then. Just a thought.

        • Kecessa
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          5 months ago

          Well then, devs should be able to increase the price as inflation increases so the equivalent cost stays the same.

          • CaptainEffort
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            5 months ago

            I wrote is elsewhere but I’ll write it again here:

            Inflation affects physical goods because you need to make the product from the ground up every single time. Those materials cost money, and rise with inflation, so making the product from scratch each time gradually costs more as time goes on. Hence why they need to raise the price of the finished product - otherwise they’d literally lose money on each sale.

            Digital goods don’t work this way, once the product has been made it can freely be distributed without having to be remade again and again.

            Yes, it costs money to patch and update. But that’s not comparable to rebuilding the product from the ground up like with physical goods.

            • Kecessa
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              5 months ago

              Selling the game is the devs income, if everything else costs more and you don’t increase your income you’re just becoming poorer.

              Just because you’re doing office work do you believe you shouldn’t get a raise?

              • CaptainEffort
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                5 months ago

                Hence why you release a new product. You can’t indefinitely make income from one thing until the end of time.

                You can charge more for a new product, as you can actually scale for inflation when you have to make it from the ground up. After all, the tools and manpower it required cost more now. So you can charge more.

                But asking for more money for a product that was made half a decade prior, that didn’t cost what it costs now since inflation wasn’t where it is now, isn’t the answer.

                Listen, as a general rule of thumb, if even EA and Activision won’t go there, maybe you shouldn’t either.

                • Kecessa
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                  5 months ago

                  So they should just stop development on a game that’s still considered early access and leave it in an unfinished state and start working on something else that they can charge more for and just stop working on it once inflation catches up no matter the state it’s in? That’s what you’re saying devs should do?

                  EA, Activision, Ubisoft don’t do it this way, instead they charge you for all extra content separately.

                  Maybe that’s what the Satisfactory team should do, release the game as is as being complete, not change the price and then release paid DLC that would otherwise have been updates so in the end people need to pay more to get the full game… Damn, we’re back to square one but now people who already paid for the game also need to pay for updates…

                  • CaptainEffort
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                    5 months ago

                    Nope, they decided to accept purchases for a game that isn’t finished, and in doing so promised that one day it would be. If they stop now they’ll just be scammers.

                    They should do what Larian did. Release the game in EA, develop the game with those new purchases helping to keep things going, then release it when it’s complete. No artificially changing the price, no bs.

                    And in what world has what we’ve gotten from free Satisfactory updates constituted would-be paid dlc? Or are you just using hypotheticals that aren’t relevant?