Videogame prices combined with hardware prices combined with the terrible state of games at launch makes playing older, actually finished games the better choice. It‘s not like Fallen Order‘s a bad game now, but I can play it at 4k handily without selling a kidney nowadays.
…I wish people realizing this was the reason for the numbers but it‘s mainly big, old live service games lol
I guess a lot of older games that show up on the list are free multiplayer games that still get new content like Fortnite, Roblox, League, and Apex, so they're accessible, probably already a part of people's routines at this point, and at least have new things every once in a while to keep it interesting.
Also I wonder why they lumped CoD Modern Warfare II, III, and Warzone together as one game
Because they are just the one game. Since mw1 cod is just a live service game with yearly $60 payments to make you think it isn't just the same game. Also includes cold war.
You are correct that people aren't playing "old games" though. Fortnite and league could easily make up 30%, add GTAV and bob's your uncle.
I have to wonder if live service games count as patient games. They are definitely older games, but they're often kept "fresh" frequently, and occasionally are very different from how they were 6 years prior... almost to.the point that it could've passed for a sequel in earlier times.
Of course, the article isn't just about these kinds of games, but the thought still came to me.
I guess while updates like League's recent big one that completely overhauls and changes core mechanics of the game, it's still League from back in 2008 and not a new game entirely. Many people have been playing the game for almost two decades now (wtf?!) and could have been spending all that time playing new releases but didn't. So in a sense, it could be seen as a patient game since it's separate from all the new AAA releases of the recent years. Same goes for other live-service games, I guess
Yeach but also if league didnt put up with the times it likely would have been abandoned by most players so you could say its basicaly just a series of sequels .
I mean its basicaly a fifa but instead of yearly realse you get constant updates. As far as im concerned a superior development model.
Beyond my own game, most of my pc playtime so far this year is on games like Rimworld, 7 Days to Die, Oxygen not included, Ark, and Men of War assault squad. I spent a couple weeks in Palworld. I also am playing Pokemon Black on an emulator on my phone.
Wartop, we just released it a couple weeks ago. Its' a virtual tabletop made specifically for tabletop skirmish and war games. We're not a sandbox though, we've got official partnerships with quite a few companies to make official versions of their tabletop games.
That won't result in certain doom for the video game industry, no sir!
I was too young to fully appreciate the scope of the first death of the video game industry, but if it happens again, I'll be paying very close attention. People will want a post mortem, and I may as well be the one to document it. (Maybe Microsoft will have to bury the Xbox brand in the same landfill where they uncovered all those E.T. cartridges.)
I have a PS4 and there are very good games I have never played.
I bought RDR2 + Assassin's creed Origins + Odyssee for $30 alltogether...
I will continue playing those games until I have completed them and a few more. After that, it's maybe time to buy a PS5 and games with crazily fallen prices...
People don’t want to spend hours playing half baked, overpriced products and would rather wait for a reasonable price drop with additional polish in a saturated market?