Why is that? I mean most people here know what the bay isI know it seems silly but we're not supposed to mention warez sites by name here. You should edit you post and remove that website name.
Why is that? I mean most people here know what the bay isI know it seems silly but we're not supposed to mention warez sites by name here. You should edit you post and remove that website name.
We're still to avoid mentioning it where evil lawyers and their scraper bots can find it. At most mention it in PMs.Why is that? I mean most people here know what the <> is
Same goes to Microsoft/Sony until XB1/PS4. I'm all for this being a thing, but it's funny seeing all the discussions going when I'm sure it's going to be more than a year after the Switch release before we see anything close to piracy.
Take the 3DS for example, it was released in February 2011. Yet Gateway, the first PUBLIC tool that allowed piracy was released in August 2013.
I am in no hurry. I'm drowning in backlog.
We don't even know if the Switch will be softmodded yet.
No, no it isn't. Supply and demand means there is a finite supply of the product. Nintendo's old games are digital downloads, it costs them literally nothing to make and they dont have to produce anything like a physical cartridge. It's 100% profit for them. I'm sorry, but $10 for an NES game is insane. I have pictures of zelda games larger than the file size for the actual game, its not worth freaking $10 anymore.that's just supply and demand. Demand remains higher on older Nintendo games than other developers.
It is supply and demand. There is a supply of physical copies out there in addition to Nintendo's digital supply. The price for these will be set to the price that consumers are willing to pay. Demand. If people were unwilling to pay the price, then it wouldn't sell which would force the price to drop.No, no it isn't. Supply and demand means there is a finite supply of the product. Nintendo's old games are digital downloads, it costs them literally nothing to make and they dont have to produce anything like a physical cartridge. It's 100% profit for them. I'm sorry, but $10 for an NES game is insane. I have pictures of zelda games larger than the file size for the actual game, its not worth freaking $10 anymore.
Can those games be played on an Airplane with the Wii U?From what I could tell, all of the launch titles could be ran off the Wii U. There is no need to launch a new console. Even that punching game could have worked with the Wii U's remote and some type of add-on/dongle for fighting against two people in the same room.
It is supply and demand. There is a supply of physical copies out there in addition to Nintendo's digital supply. The price for these will be set to the price that consumers are willing to pay. Demand. If people were unwilling to pay the price, then it wouldn't sell which would force the price to drop.
What you'll find for other games that have their prices drop is that a lot of people are selling their used copies flooding the market with a supply from different competing sources, and similarly, there is lesser demand for these games, so the sellers need to drop their prices in order to make the sale.
Is $10 for an NES game insane? For you it is. But clearly the demand for these games is high enough to sustain the price.
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Can those games be played on an Airplane with the Wii U?
There is no supply of physical copies for the original nes zelda. Used copies have nothing to do with nintendo and do not set the price, especially since the actual carts sell for way more than $10. Charging $10 for a digital download of a 20+ year old game is rediculous. If u think its a fair price, u are entitled to your opinion, but the words "digital supply," what even is that? There is no limit to digital copies... what "supply?" Nintendo doesn't have a market for physical copies of NES games either, thats 100% used copies and collectables. This is not supply and demand, Nintendo simply decides what they want their price to be and that's that. Notice how the price of VC NES titles hasn't gone down at all? Or up, for that matter. Plus, how do you know enough people are buying it to warrent any price? Do you have Nintendo's sales figures handy?It is supply and demand. There is a supply of physical copies out there in addition to Nintendo's digital supply. The price for these will be set to the price that consumers are willing to pay. Demand. If people were unwilling to pay the price, then it wouldn't sell which would force the price to drop.
What you'll find for other games that have their prices drop is that a lot of people are selling their used copies flooding the market with a supply from different competing sources, and similarly, there is lesser demand for these games, so the sellers need to drop their prices in order to make the sale.
Is $10 for an NES game insane? For you it is. But clearly the demand for these games is high enough to sustain the price.
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Can those games be played on an Airplane with the Wii U?