Pearl Abyss has confirmed that its highly anticipated open-world single-player game Crimson Desert will âdefinitivelyâ not feature any kind of microtransaction-laden cash shop or in-game storefront at launch. The MMO maker says the single-player gameâs $70 price tag reflects the all inclusive âpremium experienceâ players should expect.
The promise comes from an interview with Pearl Abyssâ PR and Marketing Director Will Powers on the Dropped Frames podcast. Powers was asked if the game would feature a similar monetization model to Pearl Abyssâ MMO Black Desert Online. âThis is a premium game you buy one time,â replied Powers. âI donât wanna say thereâs zero MTX, because there are pre-order bonuses that we have, but anything thatâs announced and thatâs coming at launch is strictly cosmetic.â
When asked if there was a chance that Crimson Desert might launch with any sort of âcash shopâ feature, Powers doubled down. âNo. I can say that definitively,â he continued. âThere is not a cosmetic cash shop. This is made to be a premium experience that you buy, and you enjoy the world, and not something for microtransactionsâŠThis is a premium experience. Thatâs the transaction. Full stop.â
The âtransactionâ Powers is referring to in this context is Crimson Desertâs $70 launch price, in contrast to Black Desert Onlineâs âbuy-to-playâ model, which consists of a one-off $10 purchase, which can be combined with separate cosmetic microtransactions and one-time DLC purchases that range from $30 to $50. Itâs also become more common even for single-player RPGs like Assassinâs Creed Shadows and Dragonâs Dogma 2 to include microtransaction shops full of content that canât be earned just by playing the game.Â
While the need to clarify this may come across as odd to some, it likely stemmed from the announcement of Crimson Desertâs $80 âDeluxe Editionâ pre-order option, which features several cosmetic items, such as the Kairos armor set and the Exclaire horse armor. Thereâs also a $280 âCollectors Edition,â but Iâd wager youâre probably not bothered about microtransactions if youâre shelling out for that anyway.
Powersâ wording also doesnât rule out the possibility of other, non-cosmetic forms of DLC in the future, which wouldnât come as a surprise considering that, as of February 1st, more than two million people have already wishlisted Crimson Desert.