Mentioned that because my two forevery games( gt7 and Helldivers 2) are amazing, I also spend my gaming hours mainly playing them. I have decreased the time I spent playing new games massively in the last two years because the few hours to play games I do get I end up playing games I am already familiar with( mainly gt7) like it is comfort food. And I don't think I am the only one.
Somehow I give games like GT7 and Helldivers 2 a pass. And no not because they're Sony games, but because you don't really have to buy the MTX and you get a lot of content simply for playing the games. They aren't annual releases nor are they AS primed to milk consumers.
Couldn't agree more. Cancelling shows is more profitable for Netflix as compared to running them. And personally I think that's a big issue and in an alternate future where gamepass actually took off, I believe it would have been a bleak reality for gaming as a whole.
Netflix is now like comfort food, as long as it doesn't become too expensive, people are happy leaving ,whatever crap show netflix releases, running in the background. People have been trained to mindlessly consume.
Yeah, especially if the current financial crises doesn't improve. People are already having trouble having basic needs fulfilled, can't imagine them subscribing to so many services that only seem to be getting worse while costing more and more.
Most subscription services don't have more than 1 hit show happening at a time. They stagger their releases to keep people subscribed, but I wonder what happens when there is an imbalance of content in favor of specific streaming services and whether Netflix would be immune to that.
Sony and WB are planning major lot expansions in Nevada. The result of this is going to be significantly more content. WB is going to be specifically HBO Max, but Sony's content is going to end up everywhere.
I think the subscription services are going to continue to rise in cost and super subscriptions are going to reign supreme at least initially. This is where Apple has a major head start and so does Amazon.
I think we're going to see continued consolidation in the entertainment space, especially if the FTC is weakened. I think you could see Netflix and Spotify merge for example and that merged entity could very well go after a company like EA or T2.
Gaming is in a very delicate spot right now and people are too distracted/angry to see that.
Yeah, and since Sony is known for its single player( and what I mainly played pre-helldivers 2), it is also optional for around 50% of their playerbase( I recall Sony stating that 59% of their player base only plays single player games a few years back and I think that is true even today).
I think otherwise personally. Hardware is winding down but software seems to be picking up. Xbox executives are now thinking why spend so much money supporting a loss making hardware when we can make far more profit making games for far more successful hardwares. It is a change in priority, currently, rather than decrease in operation
It'll be interesting to see where the Xbox userbase goes moving forward. Do they stick with Microsoft and possibly pay high premiums to stay in the ecosystem with no exclusives? Do they move to PC? Nintendo? PlayStation?
There is going to be a boon somewhere for someone.
I don't think it's possible to condition the majority of people who game to pay for subscription only gaming. If it was, MS would have achieved that milestone on Xbox - they didn't because there's several weaknesses with that model that ensure it just doesn't appeal to the majority of customers. If Sony had tried to such a tactic, they'd be in a similar situation as MS - a stagnating subscriber count for years now and a complete decline of their software sales and hardware too.
I do get what you're saying - a 'what if' scenario and how that would work. There are several ways it could have played out and none them would have been good, for sure.
Also, agreed on Jim Ryan and others like him. We can project outcomes all we want, but I'm really glad we never actually had to find out what would have happened if Sony, Nintendo, etc. tried to follow MS down the gaming subscription rabbit hole.
Don't think you need the majority, just enough to convince publishers that their games need to be on subscriptions, and then the rest of consumers don't really have a choice. Premium game prices go up and you get pushed into the sub model even more.
It was always crazy to me to see the debates on GamePass when it was such a clear and present danger to the gaming community, but I guess it is in people's nature to want that instant gratification of cheap gaming. I subscribed to MoviePass when it first came out, knowing it wasn't going to last, but I never really thought about long term damage. I was glad that AMC A-List found a better path forward that was more sustainable.
I think Sony's subscriber count wouldn't have been as stagnant since they've been able to deliver games more frequently. I think there would have been more downward pressure on costs and pricing though, so it's always about reaching that magic number as fast as possible. If they did Day 1, they could have probably added 20-30 million more subscribers than they have now on the premium tier.