I happily pay for video games. You might, too. But so many people enjoy the increasingly popular free-to-play model of video games. So many people donât pay to play. Is gaming going to be reaching a moment when many, many potential gamers just donât want to pay.
I tossed this idea into a conversation Iâve been having with some other gaming critics at The New York Times as part of the paperâs year-ending Game Theory roundtable. I wrote:
There is no common price tag for great video games anymore. The yearâs best ranged from free to $60. That initial $0 tag is becoming more popular and is affixed to a model of gaming that cajoles players to pay more for more content or to make progress more quickly or more easily. The year saw a rise in games like this and growing momentum for so-called free-to-play games. That is the money-related topic worth considering for all gamers and game critics out there â not how much the gaming industry made, but how much each game should cost and whether gamers in the years to come will still have a zeal to pay for them.
The sales of the $60 GTA V this past fall certainly support the argument that people will still happily pay for video games. But when I look at all the free games doing so well on iTunes and when I see the stats showing the millions of people who play the likes of League of Legends and DOTA 2 and so many other free or âfreeâ games, I wonderâŠ
When do we reach a point when it becomes weirder to be one of those people who pays to play than to be one of those who does not?
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