AliensCrew: And the other thing...do you really think that GOG will take their fair price package away? Why should they do so?
real.geizterfahr: Well... Because:
AliensCrew: GOG is still a company that needs to make profit to keep it existance.
real.geizterfahr: Fair price packages eat a huge part of GOG's profit. They get 30% from every sold item and have to pay every single cent from the fair price packages from their own pockets.
Take Blackguards, for example. It's €45 for us, meaning a share of €13.50 for GOG. Blackguards comes with €9.30 store credit as compensation for the higher price. GOG's profit is reduced to €6.99 (€4.20 from Blackguards + €2.79 of your €9.30 store credit), not calculating any VAT (MwSt)... That's almost 50% less than they'd make without the fair price package (and $4.80 less than they'd get from US customers). That's a lot!
AliensCrew: And why should they grant this fair price package at all if they plan to take it away in a couple of months/years?
real.geizterfahr: Because the anouncement of regional pricing went not very well. I think the fair price packages were introduced as an "insurance" for us. Some kind of proof that GOG will push hard for world wide, flat pricing. But with even indies going the regional pricing route... I can clearly see the fair pricing packages vanishing eventually.
So GOG get their cut from the US-Prices as they do it before the comming of regional Prices + the extra income through sells in Russia. Well I think they can compensate the costs for grant their fair Price package. That is called mix calculation. Very normal in the trade Business.
AliensCrew: Is here anyone who really believes that trade conditions of two business partners (like Valve and CDPR) will be made public via an article in a paper or on a website blog?
Pheace: Not everything is under NDA and even if it were, we've seen a lot of leaks about it and even screenshots of the pages where you set prices I believe.
There was also this quote from Vandal from GOG, though the original link appears to be down by now:
Vandal (CD Projekt): Just remember, Steam doesn't necessarily set the prices for games on the site -- they've asked publishers about the prices they'd like to sell games at. Publishers have to approve the pricing, or they have an option of changing it. With The Witcher: Enhanced Edition we asked them to lower the price in Europe (well, Eastern Europe, where the game is available on Steam) to be in-line with market expectations.
...
Valve sent us an email basically saying "here's what we're doing and here are the prices we're planning to use -- let us know if you need them adjusted" and I'd suspect that other publishers must have gotten that same email.. particularly considering the fact that we only have one game on Steam, so we're a minor player.
Pheace: On the page you mentionend it will be talked about a Price and not about regional pricing. That's a different thing I would say.