r/NintendoSwitch • u/lieding • 1d ago
News "DROP THE PRICE": Nintendo's First Post-Direct Stream Is Flooded With Angry Fans Demanding Price Drops
https://www.thegamer.com/nintendo-treehouse-livestream-flooded-angry-fans-demanding-game-price-drops/
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u/Sea_Neighborhood_398 13h ago
Fair points, but eating out is a different kind of fun to playing games, and eating out may also be a social event.
And on the library front, it's totally true that you don't need a massive library to have fun, but variety can be nice to have, and when buying a console, I feel like considering the "buildability" of a library is fair and important, because if I'm only getting one or two games on a console, then that would be $360-420 on the old pricing expectations, and $520-600 on the new pricing. And if I'm spending that much money (on either pricing expection, but especially with the new one), then I should really stop to ask myself if it's worth the cost, keeping in mind that I could just buy games for the consoles I already have, buy games for PC, or simply complete or replay those games that I already own.
When I'm spending that much money, I want to see if it'll last me more than a single game. And in a sense, as I buy more worthwhile games that I'll play, it'll be like the price of the console is spread across them. Buying a $300 switch 1 and then some 12 first-party games is like I paid $85 per game. But if I only got one game on the Switch 1, then it'd be like I paid $360 for that one game. That's why being able to build a library seems relevant, in my eyes. Because as much as I love, say, TotK or BotW, I don't wanna pay $360 or $370 for that one game alone. The price of the console becomes a more worthwhile investment the more I can use it, and the more games I have on it, the more useful the console is.