(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

  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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    5 months ago

    I mean, they get to decide when it’s finished, if it’s stable and there’s enough content that people are playing hundreds of hours then they can say that that’s the basic experience and if people want more they need to pay for it, in the end it’s even worse than just not having paid DLC and increasing the price as the game gets more content and life becomes more expensive.

    Not as if there was anything new to doing that, Minecraft cost about 5$ for the people who bought it as soon as it was made available, now you don’t even get the mobile version for that price.

    • CaptainEffort@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      Again, there’s literally no reason for you to believe that this price increase somehow means you’ll never have to pay for dlc. Have you never heard of Factorio?

      And for the record, like with your Minecraft example, I’m not against devs charging less for Early Access versions, alphas, betas, etc, and charging more for the finished product when it fully launches. That’s a very common practice, in fact it’s the standard.

      That’s very different than deciding to increase the price arbitrarily in the middle of developing an early access title that’s been in development for 5 years, and isn’t releasing officially yet.

      • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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        5 months ago

        “I’m not against what Minecraft did, I’m just against what Minecraft did.”

        Get your story straight buddy.

        • CaptainEffort@sh.itjust.works
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          5 months ago

          Google strawman.

          Look, I don’t mean to be a dick but unless your reading comprehension is abysmal you’re purposefully misunderstanding my point.

          Like I said,

          That’s very different than deciding to increase the price arbitrarily in the middle of developing an early access title that’s been in development for 5 years, and isn’t releasing officially yet.

          I’m okay with how Minecraft did things. Same with titles like BG3, Hades, Shovel Knight, and countless others. This is different, and if you can’t understand that after I laid it out twice for you then it’s clear you’re not arguing in good faith.

          • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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            5 months ago

            That’s exactly what Minecraft did…

            Free then 5 then 10 then 15 and so on, all price hikes that happened while the game was still in development and had not reached 1.0. it was one of the first mainstream example of an early access game!

            You just don’t want to recognize that Satisfactory today is different from what it was when it was first made available, just like Alpha and beta Minecraft weren’t the same.

            But hey, I guess I’m the one that’s not arguing in good faith by pointing out that the situation is pretty much exactly the same and that the alternative is worse for all current owners.

            Again, if you keep doing the same office job as before, do you refuse to ask for a pay increase and prefer to become poorer over time just because your job hasn’t changed?

            • CaptainEffort@sh.itjust.works
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              5 months ago

              No you’re right, Minecraft did do that. At least they didn’t hide behind inflation though, they simply increased the price as content was added.

              Regardless, office pay has next to nothing to do with this. The consumer doesn’t directly pay the worker’s salary. The worker makes the product, the consumer buys the product, end of transaction.

              Pay is handled by the studio. If the devs want a pay increase, which is more than deserved, then the studio needs to find the funds for that. If they don’t have the funds then they need to create more product. Simple as. Artificially boosting the price of existing products isn’t the answer.

              Again, it’d be like if CDPR decided Cyberpunk was suddenly worth $90 after the 2.0 update. That’d be silly.

              • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                5 months ago

                Pay is handled by the studio. If the devs want a pay increase, which is more than deserved, then the studio needs to find the funds for that. If they don’t have the funds then they need to create more product. Simple as. Artificially boosting the price of existing products isn’t the answer.

                So contrary to any other industry, game development studios don’t have the right to increase their price on products that are already on the market to follow inflation and to have the funds to increase their employee’s wages, that’s what you’re saying?

                Regardless, office pay has next to nothing to do with this. The consumer doesn’t directly pay the worker’s salary. The worker makes the product, the consumer buys the product, end of transaction.

                It’s funny because your next paragraph makes it seem like it’s the exact same thing happening for games, there’s a third party in-between the consumer and the employee doing the work in both cases.

                • CaptainEffort@sh.itjust.works
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                  5 months ago

                  Other industries follow the same standard. Buying a movie on Amazon that released in ‘95 doesn’t cost 100’s more dollars today than it did back then due to inflation. Like I said, digital goods aren’t affected in the same way that physical goods are.

                  • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                    5 months ago

                    They actually are affected the same way tough, hosting cost, labor cost, the programs used for development, the computers used for development, all of these things cost more and more, just because some people in the industry don’t act on it doesn’t mean that the same thing doesn’t happen…

                    Oh wait, what’s that? They actually do act on it by selling paid DLC for extra content and people are too dumb to realize that it’s exactly the same thing as increasing the price of the complete game while continuing to provide updates? Dang…

                    Also, look at paid subscription services, are prices staying the same forever or they’re increasing? Because I’m looking at Netflix and they haven’t released a new program, they’ve just added more content and the price is going up! Plex’s lifetime price nearly doubled in 2014, they didn’t release a new program, it was the same thing just getting updated.

                    You’re just mad because the Satisfactory team is being honest about why they’re increasing the price and it makes you angry because it doesn’t fit your vision of how the world should work but everyone else is doing the same thing just without mentioning inflation and that’s fine to you.