Nothing has to be done really. It will all just kill itself, like a cancer.
These companies are creatively bankrupt, and are only interested in circle jerking to help towards their own means.Maybe, i'm just looking at it all logically.
Software should fall under copyright, not patents. Locking generic ideas like 'being able to play a mini-game during a loading screen' and the more recent patents from N and WB trying to lock out others from using them, or attack others for doing a better job than you. It's like the pharmaceutical companies pushing for much much much higher regulations, which makes new startups too expensive to be able to get off the ground, keeping a monopoly and removing the ladder that let them succeed.
Patents should be for a physical process to make or run something. Example being say a electric motor, which then gives a limited time for them to own the singular invention. Patents are also put on drugs.
Patents should also get increasingly more expensive to keep. Say filing a new patent is $1,000, then it's a thousand times more every 20 years. A company making billions on something may pay but once it's ubiquitous and not on high demand as it was in the beginning, going into public domain is good for everyone.
The trouble will be what is left? As the companies who protect and go after others to "protect" IP are an industry in themselves, and as such, they will be gate keepers, once the industry is dead. Automated ones with AI will probably the future.Nothing has to be done really. It will all just kill itself, like a cancer.
I can completely understand and agree with your stance! Do not blame you at all.I got disenchanted with game collecting really early into my journey when I saw someone selling an SNES game without a label and with the words "DON KIKON" crudely scribbled with permanent marker on its front... They asked the price of an NES for it.
And it was far from the only example of highway robbery I encountered while trying to build my collection.
These companies are creatively bankrupt, and are only interested in circle jerking to help towards their own means.
Innovation to them = money, nothing more.
They provide not real value to any one and definitely not the the wider world.
There is a philosophy i remember hearing about when i was young, do not pee in the water supply as we all need to drink.
I got disenchanted with game collecting really early into my journey when I saw someone selling an SNES game without a label and with the words "DON KIKON" crudely scribbled with permanent marker on its front... They asked the price of an NES for it.
And it was far from the only example of highway robbery I encountered while trying to build my collection.
100%The state of the armored core franchise is a bit heartbreaking.
Around the launch of the ps4 I got 3 of the ps3 games from a gamestop bargain bin for a little over 20 dollars. Buying the same games from ebay now would cost around 300.
Hopefully they're still in a bin somewhere, because if they were disposed of I'll have to wait for ps3 emulation to become viable on lower end hardware (or waste several hundred dollars on a better laptop).
I try not to live in the past (admittedly this is a funny thing to say on a forum dedicated to retro games), but it's hard not to given the present.
It is a crying shame, and they are peeing in the water supply, drinking the same pee later down the line until is is nothing but acid which will erode it. Might be best to let it die, but then what can we learn from the death, how can we make change to it, so that people can continue to make money, cash flow can continue to happen (money in and out to real people and products, not just CEOs and the like). And to safegaurd the body of work done towards the art and history of gaming?Yeah, which is corrupted up at the top. Good companies have a creative head and a business head. The creative can see what people want and cares more about the workers who make it, while the business head just sees the numbers.
"Oh look, we'll have a higher Q3 Bump if we FIRE ALL THE EMPLOYEES".... and then they wonder why all their future products are crap and their companies goes down the drain. Short term gains over long term profits.
Just... let them die. The cycle of businesses is creation, growth, bankrupt, and then new companies picking up where the old companies failed. In 2008 with a ton of buyouts... helped no one. Instead banks took the money and gave it to the CEO's as tens of millions of dollars of bonuses and nothing changed. If they potentially died a new company would have picked up instead and been lean clean mean, and maybe it would have had a couple year hickup but the real risk of failure would have been good.
This is true, and any system including capitalism is not bad at it's heart, but greed has to be a considered factor related to supply and demand, rather then exploitation of system with things like false scarcity.The worst thing is that Scalping is not illegal, it's pure free market capitalism.
My worry is that, to stop scalpers, they'll remove our rights as consumers and make us own even less than we already do...
Imagine if we got something worse than Denuvo and Starforce to the point that we cannot even lend a game to a buddy.
Gaming history should not be behind a paywall, and this kind of thing continues to saden me to this day!
Just wait, as that will start inflating also, just have to look at the cost of cloud service vs on-prem to see where digital storefronts will be going. Companies are going mixed cloud, if not back to on-prem as a cheaper option.This is the problem I have with classic games being available for digital download on newer systems. They either are overpriced or require a subscription. They also are subject to the same risk of being revoked that all digitally purchased games are.
Another solution that comes to mind is consoles being made with backwards compatibility, but without new copies of games entering the market it would do nothing to discourage scalping of discs.
I suppose the problem is that putting resources into producing discs/hardware for a niche market isn't as profitable as charging for a glorified emulator on a digital storefront.
You should just try Armored Core 2 on PCSX2 modded with Geo-11 to play in VR.I suppose the problem is that putting resources into producing discs/hardware for a niche market isn't as profitable as charging for a glorified emulator on a digital storefront.
You should just try Armored Core 2 on PCSX2 modded with Geo-11 to play in VR.
Guys... Your games are already saved. They're Emulated. Upscaled. Reshaded. Patched. They have transcended the mortal bounds of their plastic shells. This is the way.
I saw this, they have been at it with eggs and toilet paper also, if i am not mistaken.Scalping needs to be illegal and be addressed, last month scaplers were beating each other up at a Costco to nab the newest batch of Pokemon trading cards.
Why can't we go back to the good old days when games and consoles were locked up and it was sold 1 per customer or the tickets at
Toys R Us? Stores and businesses need to fix this sort of thing and have a wait page/ numbered ticket for each customer and buy only 1 quantity of that product.
you could probably make a tv show out of that. 2 scalpers fight, only the best one is allowed to buy and resell the product in question. only the best scalpers allowed. might deter a few from engaging in the practice.Scalping needs to be illegal and be addressed, last month scaplers were beating each other up at a Costco to nab the newest batch of Pokemon trading cards.
You should just try Armored Core 2 on PCSX2 modded with Geo-11 to play in VR.
Guys... Your games are already saved. They're Emulated. Upscaled. Reshaded. Patched. They have transcended the mortal bounds of their plastic shells. This is the way.
Loving this, i am seeing bender from futarama for some reason as the judge.you could probably make a tv show out of that. 2 scalpers fight, only the best one is allowed to buy and resell the product in question. only the best scalpers allowed. might deter a few from engaging in the practice.
i think he hosted hobo fights in one episode, that and my idea are things that he would do.Loving this, i am seeing bender from futarama for some reason as the judge.
Forget PS3 emulation maybe we can soon recompile the 360 versions of 4, for answer, 5, and verdict day for pc.The state of the armored core franchise is a bit heartbreaking.
Around the launch of the ps4 I got 3 of the ps3 games from a gamestop bargain bin for a little over 20 dollars. Buying the same games from ebay now would cost around 300.
Hopefully they're still in a bin somewhere, because if they were disposed of I'll have to wait for ps3 emulation to become viable on lower end hardware (or waste several hundred dollars on a better laptop).
I try not to live in the past (admittedly this is a funny thing to say on a forum dedicated to retro games), but it's hard not to given the present.
That would be awesome, and the recompilation project has come along way. The ps3 version i have, and the 360 one. And i can say that the 360 one is superior in terms of performance, but that is due to not many companies being willing to learn how to utilize PS3 hardware properly. I think msg4 was one of the few games that did this, but that's because koji pros team where a special kind of dev unit!Forget PS3 emulation maybe we can soon recompile the 360 versions of 4, for answer, 5, and verdict day for pc.