| Category | Hard disks |
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| Created | 2015-09-17 | ||||
| Owner | sandywang5230 | ||||
| Title | I don’t think most sports games change enough from year | ||||
| Description | it has the same new soundtrack featured in the actually new Xbox 360 and PS3 versions of FIFA 13. To be quite honest, I can’t blame EA for not wanting to release any more Wii games. Wii U is almost here, and the Wii is quickly approaching some state of irrelevance. But if you don’t want to release new games on a console that hardly gives you the right to release old games and call them new and charge a full $50 for them at retail. This is where we insert a snarky comment about putting lipstick on a pig. A wag of the finger to EA for this one (though one suspects Colbert would, if he covered this sort of thing, give a Tip o’ the Hat.) I’ll be honest. I don’t think most sports games change enough from year to year to really justify full-priced releases. Like the endless stream of Call of Duty games, each new iteration of these sports games feels a lot more like an update than it does a new release. Some enterprising developer should do just that: come out with a “core” football or soccer or basketball game and then release DLC each year that updates the rosters and adds in little extras. This would be cheaper on the development side and add more value for customers. You’d make a one-time $59.99 purchase and then pay only $10 or $15 a year on top of that rather than buying an entirely new game to get updated content. Meanwhile the game itself wouldn’t change much over say a four or five year period. At the end of that cycle, a new and better full game would come www.safefifa16coins.com out but the old game would continue to be supported. Is there anyone doing anything like this in the sports game genre that I’ve simply not encountered? Follow me on TwitterorFacebook. Read my Forbes bloghere .The Numbers That Show The Inequity Of The FIFA 2014 World Cup Draw. This is a follow up to yesterday’s post that highlighted some of the factors that will make next summer’s World Cup Finals unique but unfair. The chosen format has many of the countries criss-crossing Brazil and having to cope with multiple long distance flights, fluctuating temperatures as well as the built-in inequity of some countries playing games in a far shorter time span than others should they reach the knock-out stage. | ||||
| Type | Pc | ||||
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| Promotion level | None | ||||
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