Which game do you think is the winner of this holiday season?

Saturday 26 May 2012

Day of Reckoning



The sad collapse of Kingdom's of Amalur developer 38 studios this week made me think about the incredible short-sightedness and immaturity of games developers.  The movie industry seemed to realise a long time ago that there was a limit to the number of films in any particular genre that people could watch.  Studios seem to work together to ensure that big movies stay well out of each other's way and a movie costs around ten pound to go and see and lasts two hours.  Games cost around £40 new and, in the case of many RPGs, can take long over 50 hours to complete.

Sadly Kingdom's of Amalur: Reckoning released a few months after the behemoth that is Skyrim and a few weeks before another RPG beast, Mass Effect 3.  Now I have to admit to not having played Kingdom's of Amalur and understand from its reviews that it isn't that similar to Skyrim but it surely suffers from seeming similar and releasing in the wake of such an enormous RPG.  If RPG fans were ready to dive in to another expansive world I imagine most would, as I did, wait for Mass Effect 3. 

Now, I understand the difficulty of releasing a new IP at any time but how can games companies continually get it so wrong.  We wait through a bigger drought than has hit the south of England in June, July and August.  Suddenly in September the games start coming thick and fast.  We're expecting the likes of Halo 4, COD Black Ops 2, Assassin's Creed 3, Medal of Honour: Warfighter, Resident Evil 6, Far Cry 3, Hitman: Absolution to name but a few of the big name, big number sequels.  How many perfectly good games, and more sadly perfectly good games companies, are going to get lost by trying to go up against these hugely succesful franchises.

Until game companies start to think more sensibly about the way games are released then I worry that we are going to continue to see losses like this.  People don't have the resources and time to play through games as quickly as they can watch a movie.  There is a limited amount of time to play big AAA titles and new IPs need to be releasing under a different model to the big outlay games.  Whether it's episodal content, cheaper pricing or subsidising pricing through advertising something needs to be done to get companies thinking more professionally about the business they are in and stop the sad loss to people's livelihoods and futures.

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