zlaywal: 2. There are certain GOG users that despise the fact that GOG let go of their one price policy. They long at their good old days here and furious at the slightest mention of regional discount.
I've always supported regional pricing and always will. GOG's not going to lose money by lowering prices for the 3rd world. They're losing money by NOT lowering them.
Ancient-Red-Dragon: Regional pricing is a ripoff which should not exist, and GOG itself even made a video that admits that fact, as can be seen right here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRdfYwvGTos This was back when they were small and traded in USD in every region. They also were against massive sales too. It was nothing more than marketing by a small company, dripping with copium.
When companies grow, they change. Massive sales, multiple currencies and regional prices are all part of that change.
ZP is now where GOG used to be. If they ever experience exponential growth, like GOG did, you'll see that they'll also embrace multiple currencies and constant sales.
John_Bot: Just to be clear, we don't get regional prices in south africa. Not sure if people were confused about that. We pay in $US. I have no clue what the $US price is for tyranny on steam. If it's $29.99, then GoG's price is... fine, I guess? Seems crazy expensive to me though.
Catventurer: I'll go a step further and say that I'm in California as in that state with a GDP that rivals most countries. I know what it is like to live in a place that everyone else perceives as a land of extreme wealth and plenty.
The uncomfortable truth is that there's a ton of poverty. People not from here (including other US states) like to point out all the billionaires living in my state, but they don't want to accept that there's way tons of poverty.
There are rich people and poor people in every country. Regional pricing is not about helping rich or poor people. It's about being able to make some money in a poor country.
If you suddenly kicked a poor person from the US into the 3rd world (while somehow maintaining their current income), that poor US citizen would suddenly find themselves living the life of a middle class person in that 3rd world country. This is what everyone is seemingly failing to understand.
What's the minimum wage in the US? $1200 or something per month? Well it is $400 in some other countries. So why is a $1200 p/m earner considered poor in one country and well-off in another? Because of massive price differences. How much is a McDonald's cheeseburger in the US? $2 or something? Well it's around $1.15 in the Philippines. If someone earns $400 per month, you cannot expect them to pay $70 for a video game. You will not make any money with such prices.
Once again, regional pricing is not about helping the poor. It's about making money in poor countries. It's not the same, so all these
"we've got poor people in the 1st world too" arguments are missing the point.