EA CEO hints at premium pricing for 3D games
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The following comments relate to this news article:
article published on 19 June, 2010
In the first hint of premium pricing for 3D versions of video games, Electronic Arts chief executive John Riccitiello talked about opportunities for additional growth at an executive briefing at E3. "3D may well be one of the next and most important drivers for growth. That's yet to be seen and I don't think it's a 2010 story in any way, shape or form... in a meaningful way," Riccitiello said.
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AfterDawn Addict
4 product reviews
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19. June 2010 @ 21:57 |
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add 20$ to it and make it unsellable...
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Member
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20. June 2010 @ 00:08 |
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Why would I pay more for something I don't want and can't use?
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Member
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20. June 2010 @ 09:38 |
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I agree with Microshaft's representative..I ent spending thousands of dollars that might not catch on for the next 2 years with scarce support for games and almost none for TV broadcasts..
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oappi
Suspended due to non-functional email address
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20. June 2010 @ 14:39 |
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@Josipher
+1
Biggest upgrade wave was the shift to hdtv/dvb, and im not so sure that most people are willing to spend that much money anytime soon, at least not on some old tech no one was interested in before (3d). Maybe if there was 3d broadcast, but then again we have the chicken and egg problem.
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Tecbot
Junior Member
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20. June 2010 @ 20:14 |
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Dont see much demand for 3d tv or gaming even the nintendo system if you need glasses how long before the kids lose them 1 day...a week..2 weeks before there busted.
I dont know anyone with a 3d tv and hardly anyone i know has a 1080p tv most only have 720p.
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Senior Member
4 product reviews
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21. June 2010 @ 01:16 |
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all about money, lets take a 20 year old technology and shove it homes with inflated prices. same great LCD TV add a 60 dollar chip and call it 3DTV whooo. an sure enough the people that blow money out there ass will buy it.
i wish they'd bring back the 1968 charger with a hybrid engine. you know when cars where still metal. i can see my self in 40 years trying to tell my grandchildren that back in my day we had metal lots and lots of steel and tin.
Stone age, Bronze age, Steel age, Polymer age, Plastic age.
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AfterDawn Addict
4 product reviews
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21. June 2010 @ 01:20 |
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Originally posted by DXR88: all about money, lets take a 20 year old technology and shove it homes with inflated prices. same great LCD TV add a 60 dollar chip and call it 3DTV whooo. an sure enough the people that blow money out there ass will buy it.
i wish they'd bring back the 1968 charger with a hybrid engine. you know when cars where still metal. i can see my self in 40 years trying to tell my grandchildren that back in my day we had metal lots and lots of steel and tin.
Stone age, Bronze age, Steel age, Polymer age, Plastic age.
Fiberglass dose not count?
Oh and plastic age, paper age......because you know teh plastic harms people..... *gags*
Copyright infringement is nothing more than civil disobedience to a bad set of laws. Lets renegotiate them.
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Senior Member
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21. June 2010 @ 12:27 |
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The Nintendo 3DS is going to be the first widely accepted, affordable, mainstream stereoscopic 3D outlet. Not just for gaming but for experiencing 3D photos, movies, as well as games.
It's the 3DS that will make or break 3D entrainment in the home. All other option are too costly to justify the leap, but a modestly priced 3DS in tens, if not hundreds, of millions of homes around the world will set the trend.
We shall see.
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elflaco91
Newbie
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25. June 2010 @ 05:18 |
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Guys cool it down! in 2 or 3 years 3D will be so more cheap! do you remember blurays when they come new that were like $2,000 and now you can get a bluray for $120 lol...
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