70°

Game Announcements: How Early is Too Early?

With E3 right around the corner, we’re in for some really big announcements in the gaming industry and further information on games that have already been announced. It’s an exciting time for gamers. However, I know I personally always get hyped after E3 only to find myself waiting months, sometimes even years for the games I’m anticipating. That begs the question: how early is too early for game announcements?

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geekreply.com
3146d ago
pressjudge3145d ago

Early is never early - They will always find a player base for each kind of game.

Gaming_Cousin3145d ago

I would say 10 years is the maximum. Square Enix knew exactly what they were doing /s

Shadowsteal3145d ago

I'd say if your game doesn't release within at least 3 years after the announcement...don't announce it.

40°

An Update to Our Shared Commitment to Safer Gaming

Discover how Sony Interactive Entertainment, Nintendo, and Microsoft continue to collaborate to improve player safety across our platforms.

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sonyinteractive.com
50°

Gaming On A Budget: How Exactly Do You Do It?

How do you do gaming on a budget? Here's some quick tips to stretch your dollar when it comes to gaming.

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slimepress.com
Profchaos3d ago

You have 50 years of gaming to draw from if you're on a budget you can play 30 of those at no cost on the same device you're reading this on

Dexterio3d ago

ikr?
Emulators exist for a reason.

VenomUK3d ago

Leave aside the issue of brand new games, if you can afford an Xbox or PlayStation you can get the accompanying subscription service. SO MANY GAMES! Before PS Plus with games included launched if you wanted a 'new' game you had to buy it, either new or by going the second hand shop (in the UK this was GAME or CEX). It was a one-at-a-time experience and it cost money. Now people are spoilt for choice. There's not enough lifetimes for you to play even the best games included with these subscription services!

gold_drake3d ago (Edited 3d ago )

wait for sales
buy things 2nd hand.

its rly not that complicated.
pc has piracy and emulation of retro games.
then theres jailbreaking etc etc.

the more accurate question should be "how do u do it legally".

Profchaos2d ago

Tbh you don't even need a PC to emulate I can comfortably emulate up to PS1 and N64 just on my TVs native OS I actually played mother 3 like this recently with a SNES NSO pad

raWfodog3d ago

Never buy a game at full retail price, and don't be afraid to check out free-to-play games.

DivineHand1253d ago

If you want to be the biggest budget gamer and have a decent phone for example a Samsung Galaxy s21 or higher class phone, you can do emulation. Samsung Galaxy s23 or higher can even do switch emulation, and some PC emulation.

If you have a modern laptop, you can just about emulate everything.

If you are not comfortable with emulation, then buy a PS5 and play older titles when they go on sale.

0hMyGandhi2d ago

Steam's summer sales, GOG has frequent massive sales, too. Epic gives a free game all the time. Damn, I was going to mention Redbox for modern console titles, but they went out of business like a year ago. But seriously, there are a ton of options for gaming on a budget. The golden rule is: never buy a game at full price. You really, really don't have anymore if you are just a little patient.

40°

Data suggests your game should cost between $20 and $40

Pricing your game between $20 and $40 could be a key part of attracting player interest.

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gamedeveloper.com