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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 2nd, 2023

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  • You’re totally on point. Lemmy has a lot of people stuck in the past. It’s a significant bias.

    The store will garner good sales and the Tekken devs will eat well. This will be enabled by people who see value in their work and happily pay for it.

    It really doesn’t matter what a vocal minority thinks, when the valuable non-vocal minority is out there paying big bucks for Kazuya in a fundoshi.

    In order to reach new heights as a game service, Tekken needs all the money it can get.

    People also seem to forget that Tekken started off in arcades. These arcade releases were far more aggressive in their monetization, especially in Korea and Japan. You would have people paying 5-10$ for a couple of hours. Players would also have to pay for their online player IDs.

    Tekken 7 still had this business model. The game released for arcade in 2015. 2017 for all platforms.

    The game was thoroughly milked before it was more accessible.


  • Very much agreed, though I’m not looking to switch back. Reddit had gradually turned into a homogenous slurry of astroturf and toxic groupthink. Lemmy lacks the critical mass for both of these to become a problem.

    I still find Lemmy a better alternative, because at least I can see opinions that differ from mine. I’ll gladly throwdown and get my opinions challenged rather than feel that I don’t need to contribute to a discussion.




  • If it has a separate price tag, it was outside of the main budget.

    If nobody buys the DLC it will not make any money and time invested in it will be at a loss.

    This is also perfectly fine. This is the free market. We have the right as a collective to decide the DLC’s value to us.

    If nobody buys subscriptions, DLC or expansions, it will ultimately not get made. We will return to the good old days of games where patches are only made to reach new target markets (previously unsupported devices, resolutions, platforms or translations), never to serve the existing audience unless it’s a marketing gambit.

    Games as live services will cease. This isn’t inherently bad either. It’s just a question of what you as a customer value.

    I value game franchises that I love being treated well and developed by passionate people. You can see the love the Tekken team has put on display for the past 4-5 years in particular. While their track record remains good, I am a happy repeat customer.

    There is nothing wrong with being picky with your purchases either. You don’t have to spend 20 bucks to get Eddy + the other 3 unannounced characters if you don’t assign it value. If there are more people like you out there, the devs will plan accordingly.

    This is how we got only 36 characters at console/pc launch for Tekken 7, after Tekken Tag 2 despite its immense 61 character roster bombed.

    People didn’t find value in Tag 2, so Bamco budgeted T7 accordingly. Luckily they made one smart choice, which was launching for PC and Xbox and got immense sales due to new untapped markets.

    Admittedly T8 rolls out with less than T7 on non-arcade release, but it’s worth noting T7 had 2 years in the arcades with a starting roster of 20. However T8 skips arcades entirely and has reanimated much of the character roster, which is a rare treat considering they’ve been reusing animations made even as far back as 1995 in T7 still.

    Either way, I hope you get the gist of what I’m going for here.


  • Releasing something you make outside of the budget of the main project for free is something a profit-seeking company will be very unlikely to do as it needs justification for months of work.

    Sure, they could do goodwill in the hopes of a return of investment in the form of increased sales from being such good guys.

    We’re looking an international entertainment giant here, not a small indie. They need to meet their profit margins or it’s time to fire some of the workforce.


  • In the announcement they’re showing a character that’s still a work in progress.

    You’re saying they should push back the release of a fully functional game because they’re gonna get 1 more character ready somewhere near the beginning of March?

    Based on what was shown, they’re fully redoing the mocap of a character with a 100+ moveset. This is a lot of work.

    DLC is entirely sound when your goal is to support the game post-launch for years. This income justifies a slew of balance patches, large esports event funding as well as the addition of more characters.

    You could argue that the Day 1 DLC of golden suit skins is a cashgrab or the retro t-shirts. This would be more valid, as they indeed are repackaging ready content as DLC. However, it’s just a golden suit and should be considered a tip to the developers.










  • Dewded@lemmy.worldtoLeftism@lemmy.worldcrazy idea, let's just feed people
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    8 months ago

    That’s caused by things much bigger than the food industry. This has its roots deep in human psyche.

    The uncomfortable truth is that we are all responsible for the food crisis. Inaction is the biggest cause.

    Only by changing global and local policies will we begin to solve this.

    Your method for changing them is yours to choose. History has shown a myriad of options. All stem from individuals teaming up, deciding a course of action and acting on it.

    The first step to teaming up is learning social skills. Calling people names is very detrimental. Especially the people who might join you.



  • Dewded@lemmy.worldtoLeftism@lemmy.worldcrazy idea, let's just feed people
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    8 months ago

    Farmers where I come from are generally the owner and the worker. They already get the “full” value generated.

    Funnily enough due to the government paying them, this allows the manufacturers and stores to drive down the price of goods (when bought from the producer).

    The main idea behind this was to drive down the value of goods for the consumer and to ensure the EU produces food locally, but it has created an ugly transfer of wealth where manufacturers and stores now earn more. Consumer barely sees the difference.

    So most likely something should change for manufacture and vendors as well if the system was to be made fair.

    Locking prices for manufacture and vendors is not a thing. Giving subsidies to them will stifle competition.

    Agriculture subsidies do help producers compete with China, US and other outside markets, but at the cost of reward for labor.

    I think the system is not oppressive, but it certainly is not fair. Issues crop up in the middle of the value chain and there are no easy solutions.


  • Dewded@lemmy.worldtoLeftism@lemmy.worldcrazy idea, let's just feed people
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    8 months ago

    How about any small business? If the process of being able to accept food stamps has bureaucracy, you’ll end up locking out small companies unable to meet requirements or who cannot afford it.

    Food stamps at scale could also lead to stores opting for the cheapest alternatives. Salaries will ultimately scale down through supply and demand to a point where people will have less money, but now they’ll have stamps. This in turn can hurt innovation and competition as newer products tend to cost more and people will need make stamps suffice for daily food.

    A money-based UBI is safer as you’ll ultimately see smaller salaries, but the amount of money you’ll have per month will remain static. This gives freedom of choice. Not to mention people also need homes, clothing and other daily goods in exchange for money.