@[email protected] to PC [email protected] • 9 months agoIn 2018 a group of Valve staff tried to figure out just how efficient they were being—and found they were making more money per head than Apple, Facebook, and nearly every tech giant out therewww.pcgamer.comexternal-linkmessage-square214fedilinkarrow-up1791arrow-down114cross-posted to: [email protected]
arrow-up1777arrow-down1external-linkIn 2018 a group of Valve staff tried to figure out just how efficient they were being—and found they were making more money per head than Apple, Facebook, and nearly every tech giant out therewww.pcgamer.com@[email protected] to PC [email protected] • 9 months agomessage-square214fedilinkcross-posted to: [email protected]
minus-square@ysjetlink11•edit-29 months agoIt’s actually not the standard, the standard was iirc 70% for in-store at the time. These days I think it’s closer to 50%, assuming no 3rd party losses/licensing. Nintendo/Sony/Apple/etc are all 30% too, by the way.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink0•9 months agoand Nintendo, Sony, and Microsoft charge the consumer extra for features like online play and cloud saves. Personally, I think the standard should be reduced but Nintendo, Sony, and Microsoft should start.
It’s actually not the standard, the standard was iirc 70% for in-store at the time. These days I think it’s closer to 50%, assuming no 3rd party losses/licensing.
Nintendo/Sony/Apple/etc are all 30% too, by the way.
and Nintendo, Sony, and Microsoft charge the consumer extra for features like online play and cloud saves.
Personally, I think the standard should be reduced but Nintendo, Sony, and Microsoft should start.