Traveler’s Tales Founder: PSPgo Will Die Unless Game Downloads Are Made Cheaper

Posted by Mike Bendel on December 4, 2009 @ 1:27 pm


Speaking at this week’s Develop Jury Service, Traveler’s Tales founder Jon Burton expressed his disdain towards the pricing model of digital offerings for the PSPgo, going as far to say that the platform will die unless radical changes are made.

“I own a PSPgo but don’t want to buy LittleBigPlanet, for instance, as I can get it 20 per cent cheaper on UMD from Amazon and could resell it once I’m finished with it,” lamented Burton. He added, “But if I download it, I get no discount, and no chance to resell – how annoying is that?”

One of the reasons digital download services like Steam are so popular is because you can often nab games at a sale price below their retail counterpart. On the PSP, UMD efforts are priced exactly the same as retail, and to top it off sales are a dime a dozen. It’s a troubling trend, one that Sony needs to rectify, otherwise store sales will remain stagnant. Just having weekly sales would go a long way towards generating interest.

PSPgo ‘will die without software price cuts’, says Burton [Develop]

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Read moreNCsoft Joins SteamSteam To Overtake Retail PC Game Sales In Next Three MonthsRumor: Patapon 2 Hitting Retail Sans UMD With PSN Voucher CodeSCEA: PSPgo Catapults Hardware Sales, PSN Transactions In USPersona PSP Digitally Delayed To October 1, UMD Still On Track

Comments
KingPepper says:

And you have only just come to this conclusion, NO SH*T, hence why piracy will rein ever stronger until company's like $ony & Micro$oft lower there prices.

markymark says:

How can SOny & microsoft kill the piracy if they dont have a reasonable prices on their console & their softwares....

MenaceInc says:

Cost is different for different people.

What you two may consider overpriced for certain software, I may consider a bargain.

What Sony and Microsoft do is run businesses which are looking to make a profit.

Just the same as every business out there.

What piracy does is just reinforce the idea that the videogame industry isn't a worthwhile pursuit since developers efforts are just going to be stolen anyways which results in publishers taking less chances on new IPs and we're left with an industry fuelled by sequels and movie tie-ins.

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