For one thing, I’m not American, baseline game prices here took a similar hike during the PS4 era, so I’d be curious to see if or when US game prices adjust and whether that comes with a local price bump. Although looking at recent releases maybe they already did.
For another, it is kind of insane how much lower the baseline price of what used to be called “retail packaged goods” games has gotten, adjusted for inlfation. As I write this, Civ 7 is the best selling full price game on Steam, going for 69,99USD. That’s 48-ish USD in 2010 money, the Internet tells me. The previous release to even get close to the best sellers list at that price (and it sold pretty terribly, as far as I can tell, at least on Steam), was Indiana Jones, for the same price. Everything else is much, much, much cheaper, with the list being dominated by games anywhere between free to play and thirty bucks.
That’s two conflicting pushes. Games are dirt cheap now. You can’t even sell them at the sticker price that was normal in the 2010s anymore, and even if you did, that’s 30% less inflation-adjusted money than before. The average game developer salary has gone from high 90K to 115K in 2025 in that period as, again, the Internet tells me.
So basically GTA or no, I don’t see how you get anything BUT GTA sequels and Call of Dutys going forward. It’s MTX-fests or nothing. It’s pretty messed up, IMO. I like splashy, good-looking AAA games and would take them any day over, say, a Marvel Rivals. But spoiler alert, Marvel Rivals is going to make all the money and you’ll be lucky if you ever see a Ratchet sequel again, let alone a third party big single player game.
This is some weird reporting.
For one thing, I’m not American, baseline game prices here took a similar hike during the PS4 era, so I’d be curious to see if or when US game prices adjust and whether that comes with a local price bump. Although looking at recent releases maybe they already did.
For another, it is kind of insane how much lower the baseline price of what used to be called “retail packaged goods” games has gotten, adjusted for inlfation. As I write this, Civ 7 is the best selling full price game on Steam, going for 69,99USD. That’s 48-ish USD in 2010 money, the Internet tells me. The previous release to even get close to the best sellers list at that price (and it sold pretty terribly, as far as I can tell, at least on Steam), was Indiana Jones, for the same price. Everything else is much, much, much cheaper, with the list being dominated by games anywhere between free to play and thirty bucks.
That’s two conflicting pushes. Games are dirt cheap now. You can’t even sell them at the sticker price that was normal in the 2010s anymore, and even if you did, that’s 30% less inflation-adjusted money than before. The average game developer salary has gone from high 90K to 115K in 2025 in that period as, again, the Internet tells me.
So basically GTA or no, I don’t see how you get anything BUT GTA sequels and Call of Dutys going forward. It’s MTX-fests or nothing. It’s pretty messed up, IMO. I like splashy, good-looking AAA games and would take them any day over, say, a Marvel Rivals. But spoiler alert, Marvel Rivals is going to make all the money and you’ll be lucky if you ever see a Ratchet sequel again, let alone a third party big single player game.
So… pick your poison, I suppose.