|
Site Navigation Main News Forums
Games Games Database Top 100 Release List Support Files
Features Reviews Previews Interviews Editorials Diaries Misc
Download Gallery Music Screenshots Videos
Miscellaneous Staff Members Privacy Statement
|
|
|
Irf
High Emperor
Joined: 18 Jul 2002
Posts: 1032
Location: England |
Why not? because we want Gothic 2 now, not in several yrs time when everyone has broadband. Even with broadband, gothic 2 is over 1 Gb, wso it would still be a long download. And besides, its nice to go and buy a game in nice lovely box. |
Fri Mar 28, 2003 11:39 am |
|
|
Ricky
Keeper of the Gates
Joined: 12 Mar 2003
Posts: 104
Location: Denmark |
Because im damned tired of online manuals ... I want a manual with pages printed on paper since the online manual requires both internet, registration and money ... So id rather go and buy a fine little box filled with cd's, manuals and alot of extra material than to download it from the internet and then burn it on a cd. It aint a bad idea about the downloading of the game but still i will prefer to buy it in a box !!! _________________ Life is more than wealth and luxury! Loyalty and nature is fading in the time of greed, so lets stand together and try to prolong life, instead of ending it before the sands of time has run out! |
Fri Mar 28, 2003 12:31 pm |
|
|
Jaz
Late Night Spook
Joined: 20 Jan 2002
Posts: 9708
Location: RPGDot |
I like to have things to keep, too (as opposed to downloads), but since I never look into a manual unless I absolutely have to I'd be fine with a non-paper manual. _________________ Jaz |
Fri Mar 28, 2003 12:45 pm |
|
|
kyrill
Village Dweller
Joined: 20 May 2002
Posts: 24
Location: NL |
I like to have things too, tangible in a box for instance. Most software that is for sale and downloadable is also on cd, mostly with some xtra costs involved.
However > 1GByte downloads is future.
My point is that websites like Amazon can replace the difficult logistics etc of cumbersome publishers that struggle and therefore withold a beautiful game like Gothic 2 |
Fri Mar 28, 2003 8:22 pm |
|
|
Daedalus
High Emperor
Joined: 04 Jan 2002
Posts: 2516
Location: Estonia |
naah to download a game is somthing else but to buy it from store in a box and with all the extra stuff and pictures with Gothic hell yes thats much better even when u played it over and over again u can put the box on a shelve and later maybe in many years u can tell some good friend that this was one of the best games in that or that year |
Fri Mar 28, 2003 8:44 pm |
|
|
Gorath
Mostly Harmless
Joined: 03 Sep 2001
Posts: 6327
Location: NRW, Germany |
quote: Originally posted by kyrill
I will have my contacts with one manyfacturer to print the cd's and to make the boxes and no paper documents but a pdf file on the cd. This way the game outside my little country, will not be sold in shops. In the future my game can be downloaded when the majority of my market will have broadband>5MBytes/s
Why not?
Simple. The retail market is still responsible for 90% of the game business volume. Most purchases are done by affect buyers. Without shelf space you cut out this whole segment. _________________ Webmaster GothicDot |
Sat Mar 29, 2003 1:07 am |
|
|
Dhruin
Stranger In A Strange Land
Joined: 20 May 2002
Posts: 1825
Location: Sydney, Australia |
Financing is another issue. Direct downloads may well be part of the future but publishers will still exist. Is Amazon going to pay for the development of the game like publishers often do? Without publishers, very few small development houses have the finances for a 3 year development cycle with no income. |
Sat Mar 29, 2003 6:32 am |
|
|
Toaster
Bread Alert
Joined: 27 Jan 2003
Posts: 5475
Location: Sweden |
I saw the official release date was changed to Q2. That wasn't a surprise. I think it will be out in may, and that is Q2. I skipped my Q1 hopes a long time ago. BTW, has it gone gold yet? _________________
Tabbrowser Extensions
DictionarySearch |
Sat Mar 29, 2003 11:43 am |
|
|
Nordic Barbarian
Eager Tradesman
Joined: 02 Feb 2003
Posts: 36
Location: Bucharest, Romania |
I swear, if Jowood waits any longer i'll be a full grown barbarian.
What will happen next?
Well, i'll call my buddy Schwarzenegger and kick some Jowood butt, after saving Gothic 2 of course!!
At least the world will be thankfull..... |
Sat Mar 29, 2003 11:56 am |
|
|
Evil Timmy
Eager Tradesman
Joined: 14 Jan 2003
Posts: 46
|
A system like Valve's Steam would work; however, the Internet needs to develop a bit beyond its current status for it to become a really viable method of distribution. I'm on a 10Mbit home line that costs US$25/mo (God, I love Hong Kong), so for me, a 1GB game is roughly ten minutes of download time. When more of the world gets connections like that, I can see how people would love it, as they could be playing a game within half an hour of its release and not have to worry about patches (game servers would automatically download purchased games, and patch them when they're not being played). And developers can kill off piracy by and large, since connections of that speed are always on, so they can do a CD key check a la Half-Life or Battlefield 1942, but leave a grace period if you want to play but your network segment is down (IE you have to check the game in at least once a week). It's really the Internet that's holding it back; maybe if ISPs would sign agreements with publishers to host the files on their internal servers, it would be viable now; it wouldn't cost the ISP a whole lot because they're sending the data only over their network and wouldn't have to pay others for massive chunks of bandwidth. |
Sat Mar 29, 2003 12:00 pm |
|
|
Jaz
Late Night Spook
Joined: 20 Jan 2002
Posts: 9708
Location: RPGDot |
quote: Originally posted by Toaster
BTW, has it gone gold yet?
No announcement has been made yet. _________________ Jaz |
Sat Mar 29, 2003 1:14 pm |
|
|
Lysander
Protector of the Realm
Joined: 09 Apr 2002
Posts: 265
|
Quoting myself from a different thread:
Software copy protection is the wrong solution to the problem. Copy protection hurts only the paying customers who take a performance hit and have to pay for the protection (usually licensed). There is no copy protection that has/can not be broken.
The music and game industry are in the same situation. They are both still doing business the old fashioned way. They need to update. There's always going to be piracy, but you can minimize it.
For example, they could sell games by the chapter for, say, $10 a chapter (perhaps with the first chapter free), so that gamers would be more willing to give the games a shot, especially lesser known games (such as Gothic 2 in the US), since if you don't like it, you're only out $10 instead of $50.
They could also have the chapters available for download for cheaper, maybe $5 (because there's no overhead for manual printing&materials, box printing&materials, shipping, retailer markup, duplication, etc). If PB did this, we would be playing Gothic 2 now. |
Sun Mar 30, 2003 9:19 am |
|
|
kyrill
Village Dweller
Joined: 20 May 2002
Posts: 24
Location: NL |
quote: Originally posted by Dhruin
Financing is another issue. Direct downloads may well be part of the future but publishers will still exist. Is Amazon going to pay for the development of the game like publishers often do? Without publishers, very few small development houses have the finances for a 3 year development cycle with no income.
A valid and sad point. I only suggested amazon to replace the logistics only. We see how much trouble Jo Wood has in this regard.
The alternative is what happens to Gothic 2 now.
Gorath: buying retail is historically driven. If Gothic 2 is known via web- and magazines reviews and mouth to mouth, but is not on the shelves AND can be bought via Amazon.com, people will buy it thru the internet.
At least I would, like you would, like he will
The crux of selling this way, it must be reviewed very well, it must be special, or the game developpers are very well known already for their previous efforts. |
Sun Mar 30, 2003 9:47 am |
|
|
Xerxes712
High Emperor
Joined: 01 Nov 2002
Posts: 605
Location: Uber die Welt |
Maybe you will like the Gold Edition with G2 plus Add-on; ready by Christmas 2003?
Have you not figured out real reason by now?
They did get, who was that Inforgames, to market it?
It did sell well in Germany...makes you wonder what is up.
Maybe we should send inspector Blix in to see what is wrong... _________________ Wo ist mein Sumpfkraut? |
Sun Mar 30, 2003 2:00 pm |
|
|
XeroX
The MasterCopy
Joined: 13 Dec 2001
Posts: 7125
Location: The Netherlands |
At this point a can only laugh about the release date
_________________ The original RED poster (retired now)
=Moderator of The SportsFans Club=
=member of The NFG + Shadows + WWW + PC=
To join the Sportfans PM me
www.feyenoord.com |
Sun Mar 30, 2003 2:16 pm |
|
|
|
|
|