amok: Used games are also a reason for the high prices of games:
"People will say 'Oh well, I paid all this money and it's mine to do with as I will', but the problem is that's what's keeping the retail price up -- prices would have come down long ago if the industry was getting a share of the resells."
timppu: Good news to Braben: PC games haven't been "resellable" for a long time, ever since online DRM. Hence, according to him PC game prices should have gone down from the retail-only times.
Have they? To me it seems new PC games still cost the same 50-60€ new from digital sites as they did earlier on retail (without DRM).
For older games, you seem to sometimes be able to obtain them quite cheaply from Steam etc., but then I don't know if that is much cheaper than retail clearance sales used to be, and whether it is simply because digital delivery multiplies the number of available games for sale, which in itself probably pushes the prices down.
even if the math turned out that used does hurt, thats just too bad as far as I'm concerned. People get to sell their property. People get to buy used stuff, and sometimes they get to turn around and sell it for a profit. That's they system we have, and its not fair for game companies to say "hey what gives?" when capitalism doesn't lean in their favor. You play the game, you play the whole game.
Not to mention I can still skip down to a Vintage stock and buy old systems and good old hard copies of games that nobody cares about up the food chain. I know if I crack out an old system and place in an old cart it will be just like 1993. I have no idea what is going to happen to obscure memories kids are making today that are getting locked down, DLC'ed into bits, copyright traded into legal limboland, and old server'ed into non-function.
"Say remember that game that you did that thing on? Yeah that was awesome. Where can I get it? No where? Oh here, but its not all of it. Just the base version. Oh and its not legal..."