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GAME in serious trouble

1235724

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 11,835 ✭✭✭✭cloud493


    As an interesting aside to all the digital distribution v retail talk, Sony will be releasing the promising Vita shooter Unit 13 via PSN tomorrow, while it won't be available at retail until Friday.

    It'll cost €34.99 on the PSN Store and be at the least a five cheaper in shops.

    They never do it consistently though. Mass effect 2 was 60 pounds on the store when it first came, driver san francisco too.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,397 ✭✭✭Paparazzo


    Blowfish wrote: »
    How do you figure that one? If I want to play something on day 1, I can play it 2 minutes after midnight if I get it digitally and takes a grand total of about 4 clicks. If I was to get it in a bricks and mortar shop I'd have to get up early the next morning, travel to shop, stand in queue, travel home again etc. There's no contest when it comes to ease of purchase..
    Again, you're forgetting that many people have rubbish broadband and download limits. And network and site problems when a big game is out, and if you have a console the likes of Steam isn't much use.
    Bricks and mortar shops are the best option for most gamers.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 27,348 ✭✭✭✭super_furry


    cloud493 wrote: »
    They never do it consistently though. Mass effect 2 was 60 pounds on the store when it first came, driver san francisco too.

    Perhaps but they've stated several times that Vita software will be cheaper to download than to buy retail at launch. The bigger news here is that not only will it be cheaper but it'll be available earlier too, further adding to the likes of GAME's problems.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,213 ✭✭✭✭Penn


    Blowfish wrote: »
    How do you figure that one? If I want to play something on day 1, I can play it 2 minutes after midnight if I get it digitally and takes a grand total of about 4 clicks. If I was to get it in a bricks and mortar shop I'd have to get up early the next morning, travel to shop, stand in queue, travel home again etc. There's no contest when it comes to ease of purchase.
    Possibly, but not necessarily. For a start, if they are moving to digital distribution, there's no need for an optical disk. This would reduce the cost in one area and allow more to be spent on the HDD instead.

    Saying that, I wouldn't be the least suprised if 'console' gaming ends up eventually just being a streaming service instead. This will eliminate a huge amount of the hardware cost completely, even making it possible just to incorporate it as part of a TV and have the ridiculously nice advantage of being usable across all formats. i.e. mobile devices etc.

    Granted none of this is going to happen partuclarly soon, definitely not in the generation coming, but I could easily see it starting to be pushed for the next one.

    If I want a game, it's far quicker for me to drive 10 miles to the nearest Xtra-Vision (half an hour to the nearest Gamestop), buy the game and drive home than it is for my sh*tty broadband speeds to download a game. Not to mention that if I do want to download a full, proper PS3 game, I'd probably have to leave my PS3 on for several hours, unable to watch DVDs on it or play games (as they stop the downloading), or leave it on all night and have to listen to it whirring. Until broadband speeds throughout the country are improved, there will be a place for brick & mortar shops.

    And as for downloading the game, what if you need to make room on the HDD for something else so delete it (even if you could re-download it for free). If you decide you want to replay it, you have to wait for the whole thing to download again. And modern games take up a fair bit of memory. I think Assassin's Creed 1 (which we got free with AC:R) was over 8GB to download. That was an early PS3 game. Newer ones could be over 10GB each. These things build up.

    I'm not saying it won't happen, just that it won't happen for a while, not with our broadband speeds.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,059 ✭✭✭Pacing Mule


    gizmo wrote: »
    None of that really explains why you'd consider the ratio of new to pre-owned sales to be greater over there than over here though. For instance, Modern Warfare 3 is $59.99 new and $54.99 pre-owned in Gamestop US whereas in Gamestop UK it's £41.97 new and £26.97 pre-owned. Going by figures like these do you not think it'd be more accurate to assume that the pre-owned market would be more popular over here?


    Read up again. :) I'm well aware of their practices, I was referring to Pageant Messiah's opinion that the ratio of new to second hand sales would be higher on this side of the Atlantic.

    I do believe we are mistakenly debating the same side :D

    I am of the opinion that the pre owned market here is far greater than in the states and that profits from pre owned sales here form a lot higher of a percentage of overall profit than the approx 50% you had referred to.

    When you said
    gizmo wrote: »

    well Gamestop made over $400m profit (on the back of $9.47b sales) in fiscal 2010, around half of which was from second hand sales, so it's not like they'd be struggling without them.

    I took it that you meant they would not be struggling if pre owned sales were taken out of the equation as half their profit comes from new games. I was pointing out that this was an overall figure for the groups operations and that the percentages here in Ireland / UK are not split down the middle at all. If pre owned sales were stripped out of the Irish operation it would be a very different story than in the US.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,405 ✭✭✭gizmo


    I do believe we are mistakenly debating the same side :D

    I am of the opinion that the pre owned market here is far greater than in the states and that profits from pre owned sales here form a lot higher of a percentage of overall profit than the approx 50% you had referred to.

    When you said

    I took it that you meant they would not be struggling if pre owned sales were taken out of the equation as half their profit comes from new games. I was pointing out that this was an overall figure for the groups operations and that the percentages here in Ireland / UK are not split down the middle at all. If pre owned sales were stripped out of the Irish operation it would be a very different story than in the US.
    Ahhhhhhhhhhh yes, that makes way more sense. :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,705 ✭✭✭Mr Trade In


    Unit 13 is €39.99 in Gamestop and Smyths(€35.99 with a loyalty card). I don't see it being less than €34.99 in any stores for a wHile at least.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,929 ✭✭✭✭ShadowHearth


    As an interesting aside to all the digital distribution v retail talk, Sony will be releasing the promising Vita shooter Unit 13 via PSN tomorrow, while it won't be available at retail until Friday.

    It'll cost €34.99 on the PSN Store and be at the least a five cheaper in shops.

    i have to say i was impressed with psn pricing of VITA games. i prefer to have digital copies of games for vita, because of how fragile vita games are and that swaping them is really pain in a hole.
    with current ps vita game pricing on psn i go for digital version!


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,118 Mod ✭✭✭✭robinph


    Think I must have a couple of quid on my Game card. To wait until the closing down sale and go in to pick up some cheap bargain, or bin the card and save space in my wallet? Will probably cost more in petrol to get to the shop than would be saved on any game.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 77 ✭✭Vadakin


    I was in Game in Cork today and they still had pre-order displays up for Street Fighter X Tekken. I talked to one of the staff about it but they didn't seem to know that Game wasn't going to be stocking it. One person did ask about Mass Effect 3 and they were told that Game didn't know if they'd have it in the future and that in all probability they'd only have it as a used game if someone traded it in.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,897 ✭✭✭MagicSean


    Hope they go out of business. Stupidly expensive and behind the times.


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭✭ Zoie Inexpensive Gunpoint


    MagicSean wrote: »
    Hope they go out of business. Stupidly expensive and behind the times.

    bit sad to wish any businesses away given the current economy its only natural that there a bit more expensive they have to pay for staff rent electricity etc. id hardly say its done on purpose.
    personally i prefer going for a stroll down town into the shop and flicking through the games never took to steam and the likes
    with regards to game i always preferred gamestop personally but it would be sad to see them have a monopoly on the market and even more so to see them follow in the same direction and go out of buisness i like talking to people who know about games when i buy them cant see the tesco staff being as knowledgeable


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,897 ✭✭✭MagicSean


    bit sad to wish any businesses away given the current economy its only natural that there a bit more expensive they have to pay for staff rent electricity etc. id hardly say its done on purpose.
    personally i prefer going for a stroll down town into the shop and flicking through the games never took to steam and the likes
    with regards to game i always preferred gamestop personally but it would be sad to see them have a monopoly on the market and even more so to see them follow in the same direction and go out of buisness i like talking to people who know about games when i buy them cant see the tesco staff being as knowledgeable

    Game was expensive and held a monopoly long before any economic trouble.


  • Posts: 0 ✭✭✭✭ Zoie Inexpensive Gunpoint


    MagicSean wrote: »
    Game was expensive and held a monopoly long before any economic trouble.

    not really gamestop was always there and on the same street a lot of the time


  • Registered Users Posts: 77 ✭✭Vadakin


    not really gamestop was always there and on the same street a lot of the time

    Indeed. In Cork City, Game, Gamestop and HMV are within 100 yards of each other. Game was around a while before Gamestop but even then you still had the likes of HMV and Virgin (later Zavvi) to provide competition.

    While I tend to preorder games online these days, I do still go into brick and mortar stores to pick up games I may have missed out on. It becomes a bit of a ritual, going back and forth between the shops to see where I can get the best deal.

    In the US, Gamestop have a monopoly when it comes to used games. The likes of Walmart and Target have tried to get into that market but they aren't game-focused stores. Walmart is the biggest retail chain in the US, but it sells pretty much everything and can't focus on used games the way Gamestop can. They do compete pretty well for new games but when it comes to used games, Gamestop is king.

    In Ireland and the UK, various retailers sell used games but Gamestop and Game are by far the most successful. If Game shuts down and is removed from the equation...let's just say that if you think Gamestop's used game prices are high right now, just wait.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,397 ✭✭✭Paparazzo


    MagicSean wrote: »
    Hope they go out of business. Stupidly expensive and behind the times.
    MagicSean wrote: »
    Game was expensive and held a monopoly long before any economic trouble.

    Congratulations on two of the stupidest posts on the internet.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,112 ✭✭✭Blowfish


    Paparazzo wrote: »
    Again, you're forgetting that many people have rubbish broadband and download limits.
    Penn wrote: »
    If I want a game, it's far quicker for me to drive 10 miles to the nearest Xtra-Vision (half an hour to the nearest Gamestop), buy the game and drive home than it is for my sh*tty broadband speeds to download a game.
    The post I quoted stated that Bricks and Mortar is the best way to get new games, which it quite simply isn't.

    Again though, we aren't talking about them switching to digital immediately. It's going to take time, the next generation of consoles are obviously going to have to have physical media too. Broadband speed has increased a pretty large amount in the past 5 years though, much, much quicker than game sizes have increased. In the next 5, connections that wont be capable of handling large games will be in the minority. As mentioned earlier an 8mb connection would only take a couple of hours to download a full game. 8mb really isn't a particularly high end connection on average.

    Aside from this, a lack of dedicated bricks and mortar shops does not mean you can't get a physical disk at all. Hell, even if you still have dialup you can preorder from a myriad of sites easier and cheaper than travelling to a bricks and mortar shop.
    Paparazzo wrote:
    if you have a console the likes of Steam isn't much use.
    Penn wrote:
    Not to mention that if I do want to download a full, proper PS3 game, I'd probably have to leave my PS3 on for several hours, unable to watch DVDs on it or play games (as they stop the downloading), or leave it on all night and have to listen to it whirring. Until broadband speeds throughout the country are improved, there will be a place for brick & mortar shops.
    You are basing your digital download experience on a current generation machine that wasn't designed or built with it in mind. Background downloading isn't exactly a revolutionary concept or particularly difficult for them to implement for a new console.
    Penn wrote:
    And as for downloading the game, what if you need to make room on the HDD for something else so delete it (even if you could re-download it for free). If you decide you want to replay it, you have to wait for the whole thing to download again. And modern games take up a fair bit of memory. I think Assassin's Creed 1 (which we got free with AC:R) was over 8GB to download. That was an early PS3 game. Newer ones could be over 10GB each. These things build up.
    I have over 100 items on my Steam account, every single one of them currently installed on my machine. That doesn't all of the other non Steam related games I have which space wise, isn't far off what I have on Steam. Given how large and cheap HDD's are (bar the current blip from the floods in Thailand), sticking ridiculously large ones in a console is extremely viable.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,167 ✭✭✭Notorious


    MagicSean wrote: »
    Hope they go out of business. Stupidly expensive and behind the times.

    What about the thousands of employees that will be out of work if they close down?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 236 ✭✭NakedNNettles


    To those of you who think you will still be able to buy disks 5-10 years from now, well you're kind of living in the past.

    In my lifetime i've seen cassette tapes come and go, vhs tapes same thing, what's going to be different about the humble cd, absolutely nothing.

    Fact is there won't even be cd players installed on consoles or pc any longer. The game industry is headed purely digital.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,405 ✭✭✭gizmo


    To those of you who think you will still be able to buy disks 5-10 years from now, well you're kind of living in the past.

    In my lifetime i've seen cassette tapes come and go, vhs tapes same thing, what's going to be different about the humble cd, absolutely nothing.

    Fact is there won't even be cd players installed on consoles or pc any longer. The game industry is headed purely digital.
    We'll most certainly be using them in five years due to the timing of the console cycle. If it's going to happen in the mainstream then it will be the generation after the forthcoming one where we'll see things change dramatically in terms of distribution.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 236 ✭✭NakedNNettles


    gizmo wrote: »
    We'll most certainly be using them in five years due to the timing of the console cycle. If it's going to happen in the mainstream then it will be the generation after the forthcoming one where we'll see things change dramatically in terms of distribution.

    Point taken, but just because they install the hardware dosen't mean everyone will be still using them. Companies were doing the same with floppy disk hardware back in the day.

    Fact is if console companies offer two versions, one with and one without, consumers will pick the cheaper option (one without).


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,911 ✭✭✭aN.Droid


    Point taken, but just because they install the hardware dosen't mean everyone will be still using them. Companies were doing the same with floppy disk hardware back in the day.

    Fact is if console companies offer two versions, one with and one without, consumers will pick the cheaper option (one without).

    I dunno about that.

    Take these two made up situations.

    new game comes out for xbox 1480 and the price on super xbl is 50 euro full stop, no competition.

    new game also comes out in disc form, local stores fight for cheapest price, savings of 10-20% made on games because of competition, discless console owners miss out, 10 million die... etc

    Ofcourse they are just made up situations.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,897 ✭✭✭MagicSean


    not really gamestop was always there and on the same street a lot of the time

    Not always no. There was a time when Game only had competition from the likes of HMV and Currys. They took advantage of this with high prices limited stocks and poor customer service. When Gamestop came on the scene Game introduced a second hand console game service that offered very low prices on the trade ins and they suffered for it. They've effectively ended their PC sales which was probably the only area they had any advantage in. Gamestop won't be far behind them after that whole Deus Ex incident showed their level of desperation.
    Paparazzo wrote: »
    Congratulations on two of the stupidest posts on the internet.

    Thanks. Congrats on reading the whole internet.
    Notorious wrote: »
    What about the thousands of employees that will be out of work if they close down?

    That's hardly a reason to support a dead business model is it? Look at the tons of jobs bing created by companies pedaling digital products and services. The computer game shop is a dead horse that Game and Gamestop eep flogging. The likes of Steam and Play.com could replace them as the main game suppliers in Ireland and nobody would notice other than the employees.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,807 ✭✭✭Xcellor


    Personally I prefer to GAME to gamestop. I always found the game I wanted cheaper in GAME. Staff helpful. Loyalty card scheme.

    Plus I have 50 euro voucher to use so better not go out of business!!!!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,897 ✭✭✭MagicSean


    Limericks wrote: »
    I dunno about that.

    Take these two made up situations.

    new game comes out for xbox 1480 and the price on super xbl is 50 euro full stop, no competition.

    new game also comes out in disc form, local stores fight for cheapest price, savings of 10-20% made on games because of competition, discless console owners miss out, 10 million die... etc

    Ofcourse they are just made up situations.

    It's only matter of time before consoles will have to be accessable by any digital download supplier. I'm surprised the competition auhorities aven't already stepped in there. Once the market opens then digital downloading will be a much more competitive market than local stores.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,397 ✭✭✭Paparazzo


    To those of you who think you will still be able to buy disks 5-10 years from now, well you're kind of living in the past.

    In my lifetime i've seen cassette tapes come and go, vhs tapes same thing, what's going to be different about the humble cd, absolutely nothing.

    Fact is there won't even be cd players installed on consoles or pc any longer. The game industry is headed purely digital.

    There's a big difference between a change of media format and download only.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 236 ✭✭NakedNNettles


    http://www.gamasutra.com/view/feature/129964/the_state_of_korea_pc_games.php?page=1

    Five year old article on PC gaming in South Korea but it's pretty much the same story today as i'm currently based here and see it all with my own two eyes.

    Bricks and mortar game retail is dead here, online downloading and online play is king. They also have the fastest broadband speeds in the world which helps.

    This is the future.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 33,733 ✭✭✭✭Myrddin


    It's amazing the people who are singing the praises on online distribution only...I take it you all live in Dublin yeah?

    Spend some time down the shticks, enjoying Ireland's broadband infrastructure outside of the capital...& come back and let us know if you've changed your mind.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,405 ✭✭✭gizmo


    Point taken, but just because they install the hardware dosen't mean everyone will be still using them. Companies were doing the same with floppy disk hardware back in the day.

    Fact is if console companies offer two versions, one with and one without, consumers will pick the cheaper option (one without).
    Can't say I agree. Of all the gaming demographics (PC, console and handheld) I'd wager that the mainstream console audience will be the last to embrace digital downloads. While it's easy to point out the silly prices the DD versions of full games command on the major consoles as a reason for this lack of adoption, a more relevant example is the poor sales of XBLA and PSN titles which are far more sensibly priced and have been oozing quality for the last couple of years.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,731 ✭✭✭✭K.O.Kiki


    gizmo wrote: »
    Can't say I agree. Of all the gaming demographics (PC, console and handheld) I'd wager that the mainstream console audience will be the last to embrace digital downloads. While it's easy to point out the silly prices the DD versions of full games command on the major consoles as a reason for this lack of adoption, a more relevant example is the poor sales of XBLA and PSN titles which are far more sensibly priced and have been oozing quality for the last couple of years.
    When was the last time you saw advertising for XBL/PSN titles?

    EXACTLY.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 459 ✭✭Sesudra


    EnterNow wrote: »
    It's amazing the people who are singing the praises on online distribution only...I take it you all live in Dublin yeah?

    Spend some time down the shticks, enjoying Ireland's broadband infrastructure outside of the capital...& come back and let us know if you've changed your mind.

    This is the big concern for me - does this mean that Ireland will get left behind if things do go all digital? So only people in the urban centres will have access to fast enough broadband, and tough luck to everyone else? I'm living in Dublin at the moment so it wouldn't be an issue but am planning a move down the country, I wouldn't fancy my chances of being able to download the latest game.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,951 ✭✭✭Cherry_Cola


    Sesudra wrote: »
    This is the big concern for me - does this mean that Ireland will get left behind if things do go all digital? So only people in the urban centres will have access to fast enough broadband, and tough luck to everyone else? I'm living in Dublin at the moment so it wouldn't be an issue but am planning a move down the country, I wouldn't fancy my chances of being able to download the latest game.

    Most of us will more than likely have emigrated before it becomes mainstream anyway :(


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,405 ✭✭✭gizmo


    K.O.Kiki wrote: »
    When was the last time you saw advertising for XBL/PSN titles?

    EXACTLY.
    Everytime I turn on my 360 I see ads for newly released titles. Then there's the ads for the ones which are on sale. There's also the fact that I've learned to check the Games Marketplace weekly to see what's out on the off chance I haven't seen anything pop up on the gaming websites.

    While the last point isn't relevant to mainstream gamers who don't take the time to browse such sites on a daily basis, I think there's still enough advertising on the main Dash to at least draw some people's attention.

    On a different note, there's an interesting reponse from publisher/developer/GamersGate operator Paradox to the whole situation on gamesindustry.biz today. Seems like GAME really rubbed some of these guys up the wrong way over the years.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 23,556 ✭✭✭✭Sir Digby Chicken Caesar


    i have 3 meg atm, and that's more than enough to leave steam downloading while I sleep and download just about any game
    unless you're stuck with 512/1meg or something equally horrible digital distribution isn't a huge problem. you'll just have to plan ahead, unlike **** with 50 meg connections who can download a full game in 3 minutes

    I miss my 50 meg :(


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 236 ✭✭NakedNNettles


    EnterNow wrote: »
    It's amazing the people who are singing the praises on online distribution only...I take it you all live in Dublin yeah?

    Spend some time down the shticks, enjoying Ireland's broadband infrastructure outside of the capital...& come back and let us know if you've changed your mind.

    I live in South Korea currently, not in Dublin.

    Why wouldn't anyone sing the praises of online distribution if they have an excellent connection? :D Anyway I like most are talking about the future for bricks and mortar retail not the present.

    No one is gonna take your shiny disks away from you for the moment. Jeeez, get with the program man!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 236 ✭✭NakedNNettles


    Sesudra wrote: »
    This is the big concern for me - does this mean that Ireland will get left behind if things do go all digital? So only people in the urban centres will have access to fast enough broadband, and tough luck to everyone else?

    Good point, could well be man.

    The way things are going all over the world, populations are moving to urban centres so its only logical that all business and infrastructure will concentrated on these areas.

    There wouldn't be much point in running expensive infrastructure to remote parts just to support a smaller demographic of people. I'd say urban centres round Ireland will be up to date though.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 33,733 ✭✭✭✭Myrddin


    I live in South Korea currently, not in Dublin.

    Why wouldn't anyone sing the praises of online distribution if they have an excellent connection? :D Anyway I like most are talking about the future for bricks and mortar retail not the present.

    No one is gonna take your shiny disks away from you for the moment. Jeeez, get with the program man!

    I've no problem whatsoever with online distribution. I've a 50Mb connection & tbh traffic & speeds arn't a concern. However, I realize I'm lucky enough to live in an area with semi-decent broadband infrastructure, & I also realize that a vast amount of Irish citizens have really poor 'broadband', & dial up in some cases.

    My mind is open to the bigger picture, not just my own situation. Get with the program? Tell it to the government, who neglected our telephony/communication infrastructure for so so long, & is getting more & more apparent by the day.

    If things do go online only, I'll not have a problem with that. But I pity those in Ireland who live outside of the capital ;)


  • Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 7,941 Mod ✭✭✭✭Yakult


    Haven't bought a physical copy of a game in years and dont plan on ever starting so it doesn't affect my gaming one bit. Still, alot of jobs on the line and any business in general having that looming over is them is not good.

    Out of all the industries, I thought game shops would stay pretty strong, I guess not.
    EnterNow wrote: »

    If things do go online only, I'll not have a problem with that. But I pity those in Ireland who live outside of the capital ;)

    It's not 2001. Most people now have 8/20mb (if not more) outside of Dublin and that's plenty.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 33,733 ✭✭✭✭Myrddin


    Yakult wrote: »
    It's not 2001. Most people now have 8/20mb (if not more) outside of Dublin and that's plenty.

    Quite a few mates of mine don't. And it's 2012. How sad is that.


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 23,556 ✭✭✭✭Sir Digby Chicken Caesar


    its not really, if you want ot live outside of urban centres you can't complain overmuch when you are denied the benefits of living in an urban centre. it's a trade off people living in rural areas decided to make.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 33,733 ✭✭✭✭Myrddin


    its not really, if you want ot live outside of urban centres you can't complain overmuch when you are denied the benefits of living in an urban centre. it's a trade off people living in rural areas decided to make.

    That's certainly true, & I see it that way too. But from a commercial point of view, your only making it harder/less likely for people in those areas to buy your game if you go online only.


  • Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 7,941 Mod ✭✭✭✭Yakult


    EnterNow wrote: »
    Quite a few mates of mine don't. And it's 2012. How sad is that.

    Very sad indeed! My cousin lives 20 miles outside Dublin and he cant get BB because they still haven't upgraded the lines or something along that. 10 houses all without it on a 1km stretch of road.

    Your right in a sense, if games are going to become more online orientated they need to look at the BB infrastructure first.


  • Moderators, Music Moderators Posts: 25,868 Mod ✭✭✭✭Doctor DooM


    its not really, if you want ot live outside of urban centres you can't complain overmuch when you are denied the benefits of living in an urban centre. it's a trade off people living in rural areas decided to make.

    I live literally 15 minutes walk outside the county of Dublin and can't get decent broadband.

    The people across the road can.

    It's not a simple case of where you live, there's no impetus it seems for BB companies to actually become better (we've been pestering various companies for years to sort it out).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,606 ✭✭✭Carroller16


    That GAME store on Dawson St. is empty every time i go in. Always seems like a strange place to have a game store and it's like it's on the wrong side of the road.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 236 ✭✭NakedNNettles


    Yakult wrote: »
    Very sad indeed! My cousin lives 20 miles outside Dublin and he cant get BB because they still haven't upgraded the lines or something along that. 10 houses all without it on a 1km stretch of road.

    :pac: That's crazy! .....and seriously backward in this day and age.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,207 ✭✭✭longhalloween


    Yakult wrote: »
    It's not 2001. Most people now have 8/20mb (if not more) outside of Dublin and that's plenty.

    Not likely, me and most people I know have 1-3mb broadband with download caps of 15-30gb.

    Eircom haven't been up my road since they installed the copper cable.

    Is there an official statements from GAME about how the company's doing?


  • Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 17,135 Mod ✭✭✭✭cherryghost


    Yakult wrote: »
    It's not 2001. Most people now have 8/20mb (if not more) outside of Dublin and that's plenty.

    Some of my friends can barely manage 1mb in the countryside. It really does suck in some places.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,397 ✭✭✭Paparazzo


    Sesudra wrote: »
    This is the big concern for me - does this mean that Ireland will get left behind if things do go all digital? So only people in the urban centres will have access to fast enough broadband, and tough luck to everyone else? I'm living in Dublin at the moment so it wouldn't be an issue but am planning a move down the country, I wouldn't fancy my chances of being able to download the latest game.

    And that's why you'll always be able to buy a game on a format like a disk in a shop. I think we're a lot further away from download only than people think.
    It'll mean far less sales for one. I'm sure it'll be an option on next gen consoles, but there'll always be way to buy a game in a shop.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,897 ✭✭✭MagicSean


    EnterNow wrote: »
    It's amazing the people who are singing the praises on online distribution only...I take it you all live in Dublin yeah?

    Spend some time down the shticks, enjoying Ireland's broadband infrastructure outside of the capital...& come back and let us know if you've changed your mind.

    Actually no. I live in an area with no access to landline broadband. Eircom have no plans to upgrade my local exchange and will provide no reason for this. They effectively control the size of the broadband market. I get broadband via a small dish on my roof. It's expensive and prone to interruption but I can get good speed. i think he next big change will come when Sky introduce their broadband services. If people can get their tv and broadband through their satellite provider Eircom will likely take a big hit, especially when you look at the proposed scale of Sky on demand services. The introduction of Sky Broadband will hopefully give Eircom the kick up the arse they need.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,234 ✭✭✭Meesared


    MagicSean wrote: »
    Actually no. I live in an area with no access to landline broadband. Eircom have no plans to upgrade my local exchange and will provide no reason for this. They effectively control the size of the broadband market. I get broadband via a small dish on my roof. It's expensive and prone to interruption but I can get good speed. i think he next big change will come when Sky introduce their broadband services. If people can get their tv and broadband through their satellite provider Eircom will likely take a big hit, especially when you look at the proposed scale of Sky on demand services. The introduction of Sky Broadband will hopefully give Eircom the kick up the arse they need.
    The thing is Sky Broadband is still crap in the UK if you are using Satellite, most Sky Broadband is through DSL in the UK


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