
Yes yes. We all know about the current situation in the video game world, with a ton of new games coming out that we all seem to want to play. However, it actually seems, for some at least, like there ARE too many coming out and it's a bit daunting to say the least. Obviously, some games take precedence over others for different people. I always tend to go after RPGs and the more future-obscure titles before picking up the more popular games.
Obviously, opting for the more impending-obscure titles makes it a lot less expensive in the long run, although I definitely have a backlog of past obscure games that I want to track down and buy. It's definitely like a neverending cycle nowadays; buy older titles and get left behind in the newest generation.
The list keeps growing...
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Felix_Arabia - May 27, 2008 (04:34 AM) I think, thanks largely to the Internet, that it's not a bad thing to be lost in the sea of never-ending new games. What I mean is that new games are pricier, especially since many of them now have a $60 price tag. You could spend hundreds if not thousands of dollars just to say you have the latest and greatest games . . . but by waiting for all the older games to go super cheap and then buy them online or at a used game store or wherever is so much more economically friendly. It's really a wonderful thing. |
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MasterVG71782 - May 27, 2008 (10:46 AM) That much is true, for certain. However, there are those games that come out that you KNOW will be hard to find after a few months (anything produced by Atlus, for example) and there lies a slight problem. It is these smaller-known games that's draining my wallet and preventing me from enjoying the large-scale ones, like GTAIV (even though I don't own a PS3 or 360). I mean, it's not a big deal or anything, since I own A LOT of games, but it's still daunting. |