For example, I reside in Japan and bought Death Stranding 2: On the Beach (Deluxe) ¥9,980 (54,15€ / £47.00) but 89,99€ / £79.99 despite purchasing it from Steam. And that’s not the only instance: as Resident Evil: Requiem (Deluxe) for ¥9,990 (54,25€ / £47.05) but 79,99€ & £69.99 like why? I’ve heard that Euro has close to a +30% price hike when referencing from the USD metric in regards to regional pricing.
The same kind of argument from American gamers who winge about $70 games being the default price forgot one thing, taxes are not accounted for (so they’re paying even more) while for both British & European gamers: VAT is accounted in the final price hence why they often look expensive at launch. The reason why games have different prices is due to PPP of a country taken into account, but are (physical copies) of games expensive in the US?
Gamers who live in countries with weaker currencies tend to have lower thresholds in their pricing but are paid less in minimum wage than those living in the EU, UK or US. The alternative gamers use to save money on steam game purchases are either Green Man or Fanatical in which they are authorized game key providers who obtain them from the developers themselves, selling keys for a fraction of Steam’s default price tag.
PonyOfWar@pawb.social 22 hours ago
The Yen has been an extremely weak currency for a few years now. Just 5 years ago, 1€ would give you 130¥, now it’s 180¥. But Japanese purchasing power has not risen accordingly. So games would simply be unaffordable to Japanese people (way more so than they currently are to Europeans) if they priced them like the Euro prices.