Annnnnnnd less than 5 pages in, someone invokes Godwin's Law. And reductio ad absurdumVerlander said:By that train of thought, Josef Fritzl was forgiveable because Hitler was worse.
Congradulations sir!
OT: I agree Jim. Good point.
Annnnnnnd less than 5 pages in, someone invokes Godwin's Law. And reductio ad absurdumVerlander said:By that train of thought, Josef Fritzl was forgiveable because Hitler was worse.
Nice to see someone was on the lookout for it.CM156 said:Annnnnnnd less than 5 pages in, someone invokes Godwin's Law. And reductio ad absurdumVerlander said:By that train of thought, Josef Fritzl was forgiveable because Hitler was worse.
Congradulations sir!
If by "forgiveable" you mean reintegrate him into society, then yes, he very much is after proper therapy.Verlander said:By that train of thought, Josef Fritzl was forgiveable because Hitler was worse.
I'm gonna go ahead and hope you don't have to worry too much, some will slip thru the cracks, but as storage and bandwidth naturally increase, I think we'll find the catalogs of Steam, GOG.com, Green man Gaming and the like widening to include more and more old classics, prepatched, pretweaked and ready to work on Windows 7.Draitheryn said:I almost always buy new, and never trade in my games. I keep my games because I never know when I want to play them again, and how inaccessible they may be in the future. When I buy a used game, its because its for a system that no longer produces new games such as ps1. The fact that if this trend continues, in 20 years we will never be able to play games we love today just because we didnt have the funds to buy them all when they came out is abhorring to me.
I dont always agree with Jim, but this time he he hit the nail on the head.
Hi Jim. As an economist, I can't help but feel that there's a whole side of the used games argument that you're missing, or at least you didn't address in your last two videos (Relevant but unnecessary Wikipedia article for further reading [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rivalry_%28economics%29]).Jim Sterling said:Used Games Have A Right To Exist
Publishers would have you believe that used games are the biggest threat to the games industry. Even gamers will sympathize with these huge companies and equate the used market with piracy. Unlike piracy, however, used games have plenty of right to exist and are not the demonic entity others make them out to be. Jim Sterling, naturally, has the band-aid of reality to plaster over your fantasy cuts.
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So you think it would be better for publishers if people could NEVER buy new from a Gamestop store. Brilliant!alinos said:I;m only against Used games, When they are sold through the same retail store that sells the real thing.
If you want to buy used games it should be through craigslist,Ebay, or a cashconverters(not sure of the american equivilant(or if there is one))
This way there isn't that checkout conversion that everyone who has been in a gamestop or EB hates. of "You can get the used copy 5 dollars cheaper" Being able to have a last ditch attempt to divert a customer that was going to buy the new copy to a used is the biggest issue in my mind.
If you remove used games from the gamestores that sell them, you put the onus on the customer to go and find a copy(even if it means Gamestop were to open a used game's shop chain) seperate it from the new purchases.
And while i have no conclusive evidence to back up this claim. I expect that when someone buys a used game even if they were going to buy it new, the fact that it's a used copy means it is much more likely to be sold back to the same place it was just bought from.
The fact is that everyday people can make far more than Gamestop will ever give them for their used titles, and at the same time gamers can get a reasonable price instead of the minimum amount gamestop believe needs to be taken off the title to make it appealing to buy
Exactly. The example of where console gaming is heading is right before everyone's eyes but they refuse to see it and to make matters worse, you won't find Steam sales on your console. You will be paying top dollar the entire console cycle because the big three won't need to compete with retail and used sales will be impossible. You think you'll ever see the Wii Virtual Console games go on sale? That is the future for console games. Your disc based games will be just as crippled as digital download only games are today.nikki191 said:console gamers need to take a long hard look at pc gaming, what companies did to it, how the used game business does not exist and you are pretty much forced to register every game you buy. that is the future of console gaming and its going to come very soon.
Uhm, but if you think it's fine to sell used games because "capitalism, bitches!", then you can't complain when the publishers add stuff like DLCs and require you to pay to go online and various other crap, because that's also "capitalism, bitches!"Invader_Ace said:Jim, thanks for, making "The Live by Capitalism, Die by Capitalism" argument. It's one you never see brought up, at least clearly enough. If the industry wants to rake in the profits through the system, then fuck them saying I can't sell my stuff.
It's Capitalism bitches!
Cable TV is a service. No property changes hands. A movie is a service, the ticket is just your proof of purchase which is ripped in half when you enter the screen room. It's not property that you keep because it has value.Draech said:Cable TVRealitycrash said:I'm sorry, but you didn't answer my question, you just referenced that there ARE places where you pay from time to time (such as movies), but they never sell you any property, so your argument (if it even was one?) is invalid.Draech said:Yeah because this is all new. No1 has ever made a pay as you go system for entertainment before.... cept since the invention of entertainment.Realitycrash said:I'm sorry, I just find it amusing that you find this mans "arguments" to be "Fantastic" (even though he just uses rethorics and call Jim a baby) yet to condone Jim for his "flawed arguments", Jim pretty much using nothing but rethorics himself.Draech said:Fantastic. Could not have said it better myselfbringer of illumination said:So in essence your argument is:
Waaaaah!!! Piracy is worse than trade-ins therefore trade-ins aren't hurting the industry at all!
Waaaaah!!! EA is a worse company than Gamestop (which they aren't, not by a long shot, at least EA actually funds games and many great games at that.), therefore all of Gamestop's bullshit nickle-and-dimeing and intentional working around the companies that actually makes the games are perfectly acceptable!
Waaaaah!!! I don't want the corporate fat cats at EA making money! I'd much rather give my money to the corporate fat cats at Gamestop!
Waaaaah!!! Murder is a worse crime than assault! Therefore punching random people on the street in the face isn't a problem at all!
Class act there Jim.
But alas, you're wrong.
You know who is really hurt by used games? All those smaller titles you talked about two weeks ago. They're the ones that can't afford great marketing, and thus can't push many unit at launch, but because of used sales, slow sales over time quickly regress to no new sales at all, because the games are being traded in is very high compared to the rate at which the game is being bought.
I still cant believe he wants to whine for 3 full episodes with these flawed arguments.
My amusement put aside, I have to ask you; Do you believe it's right to lose your right to sell something you own? Because all the other "arguments" put aside, this is a rather solid one.
Answer the question, please.
But putting that aside Movie tickets still count. A game in a box is just a movie ticket. It has a playtime and it has an end. Thoes that dont have an extra service, usually one that they pay for.
But putting that aside you are changing the question. There is no proberty involved in games. Do you pay for the disk or the entertainment on the disk? You ne to categorise it as entertainment rather than proberty. and all of a sudden its not a big issue that they try to change it as a pay as you go system.