NewBlacksmurf wrote: »rotaugen454 wrote: »A moderator removed my reply from another thread as it "threatened to derail" the discussion because it focused on the cost of the mount (but, funnily enough, kept the positive post that I responded to that ALSO discusses the cost of the mount), so I'll respond here again.kevlarto_ESO wrote: »I think it is a pretty cool mount, I am not going to buy one myself, I enjoy seeing others ride by on them. It seems a little Lord of the Ringish, but oh well.
But if you can afford one and like it by all means buy one, it's your money your game and your fun, you are not a sucker for enhancing your game play, the haters are most likely the players that think everything should be free or mommy and daddy will not open up the credit card for them LOL
Anyone who purchases this mount is absolutely a sucker. CDN $50 is almost the price of an entire new game. Think about what you're buying, here: it's an object that gets you from point A to point B. Is that equivalent in value to an entire new video game?
I don't want the mount for free: I want to pay a reasonable amount for it (2500 crowns max).
Absolutely a sucker if you buy? Would you buy it for $1? That is what the $20 (in discounted crowns) is equivalent to for some people. You might as well say anyone is a sucker who buys a coffee at starbucks, which costs as much as several coffees elsewhere.
That's a poor analogy. This isn't about premium mounts being cheaper in other games; this is about inconsistent store pricing in this game. If Starbucks started randomly charging $5 for coffee after consistently charging $2, and people continued to buy their coffee, then yeah, they're suckers. I can buy two full freaking DLCs in this game for cheaper than this mount. Are you people HONESTLY suggesting that the Elk Mount is indeed worth more to you than Dark Brotherhood and Thieves Guild COMBINED?
Someone gets it.
Thanks for this context
rotaugen454 wrote: »A moderator removed my reply from another thread as it "threatened to derail" the discussion because it focused on the cost of the mount (but, funnily enough, kept the positive post that I responded to that ALSO discusses the cost of the mount), so I'll respond here again.kevlarto_ESO wrote: »I think it is a pretty cool mount, I am not going to buy one myself, I enjoy seeing others ride by on them. It seems a little Lord of the Ringish, but oh well.
But if you can afford one and like it by all means buy one, it's your money your game and your fun, you are not a sucker for enhancing your game play, the haters are most likely the players that think everything should be free or mommy and daddy will not open up the credit card for them LOL
Anyone who purchases this mount is absolutely a sucker. CDN $50 is almost the price of an entire new game. Think about what you're buying, here: it's an object that gets you from point A to point B. Is that equivalent in value to an entire new video game?
I don't want the mount for free: I want to pay a reasonable amount for it (2500 crowns max).
Absolutely a sucker if you buy? Would you buy it for $1? That is what the $20 (in discounted crowns) is equivalent to for some people. You might as well say anyone is a sucker who buys a coffee at starbucks, which costs as much as several coffees elsewhere.
That's a poor analogy. This isn't about premium mounts being cheaper in other games; this is about inconsistent store pricing in this game. If Starbucks started randomly charging $5 for coffee after consistently charging $2, and people continued to buy their coffee, then yeah, they're suckers. I can buy two full freaking DLCs in this game for cheaper than this mount. Are you people HONESTLY suggesting that the Elk Mount is indeed worth more to you than Dark Brotherhood and Thieves Guild COMBINED?
rotaugen454 wrote: »A moderator removed my reply from another thread as it "threatened to derail" the discussion because it focused on the cost of the mount (but, funnily enough, kept the positive post that I responded to that ALSO discusses the cost of the mount), so I'll respond here again.kevlarto_ESO wrote: »I think it is a pretty cool mount, I am not going to buy one myself, I enjoy seeing others ride by on them. It seems a little Lord of the Ringish, but oh well.
But if you can afford one and like it by all means buy one, it's your money your game and your fun, you are not a sucker for enhancing your game play, the haters are most likely the players that think everything should be free or mommy and daddy will not open up the credit card for them LOL
Anyone who purchases this mount is absolutely a sucker. CDN $50 is almost the price of an entire new game. Think about what you're buying, here: it's an object that gets you from point A to point B. Is that equivalent in value to an entire new video game?
I don't want the mount for free: I want to pay a reasonable amount for it (2500 crowns max).
Absolutely a sucker if you buy? Would you buy it for $1? That is what the $20 (in discounted crowns) is equivalent to for some people. You might as well say anyone is a sucker who buys a coffee at starbucks, which costs as much as several coffees elsewhere.
That's a poor analogy. This isn't about premium mounts being cheaper in other games; this is about inconsistent store pricing in this game. If Starbucks started randomly charging $5 for coffee after consistently charging $2, and people continued to buy their coffee, then yeah, they're suckers. I can buy two full freaking DLCs in this game for cheaper than this mount. Are you people HONESTLY suggesting that the Elk Mount is indeed worth more to you than Dark Brotherhood and Thieves Guild COMBINED?
Somewhere in an executive office or a boardroom lurk the money people who don't really care about or even play games, who don't think too highly of the idea people who create the games, the visual artists, the coders that make it all possible, the community relations staff... they don't like us much either except as sources of profit. Every large company has these people in their executive offices and boardrooms. Their products are just a means to an end and are gauged strictly on their profitability.
Price exclusivity encourages egocentric personality disorders and alienates the majority of customers.
You will always make more money selling 1000 items for $10 than 100 for $30.
If people crave exclusivity they should have to do something more than drop a credit card number, which is meaningless. They should do something in-game that requires actual skill, and represents an actual accomplishment.
ZOS should learn what most professional marketing teams already understand and stop dragging what has been an excellent B2P model through the absolute worst of the micro-grab muck.
rotaugen454 wrote: »Price exclusivity encourages egocentric personality disorders and alienates the majority of customers.
You will always make more money selling 1000 items for $10 than 100 for $30.
If people crave exclusivity they should have to do something more than drop a credit card number, which is meaningless. They should do something in-game that requires actual skill, and represents an actual accomplishment.
ZOS should learn what most professional marketing teams already understand and stop dragging what has been an excellent B2P model through the absolute worst of the micro-grab muck.
But how do you know they will sell 10 times as many? What actual game sales data do you have to back it up? People keep using this arguement, but can't actually prove any of it. It may very well be they sell 10 times as much, but it could be they sell twice as much after cutting the price to less than a third. The only ones with that data are the analysts on their side. The rest of us are guessing repulsed.
rotaugen454 wrote: »But how do you know they will sell 10 times as many? What actual game sales data do you have to back it up? People keep using this arguement, but can't actually prove any of it.
rotaugen454 wrote: »But how do you know they will sell 10 times as many? What actual game sales data do you have to back it up? People keep using this arguement, but can't actually prove any of it.
The statistics hold true across billions of transactions from a vast sampling of global markets over many, many years. It is true for far more than ZOS sales. It is a well known and well established fact which is why people continue to use it.
The majority of customers will not buy over-priced items because the majority of people do not have large reservoirs of disposable income. This is true for customers at Walmart as much as the customers at ESO.
Sure there will always be mentally imbalanced people who think they are somehow cool for buying the Nordstrom gimmick rock-in-leather for $85 bucks just because they can, but they are the naked Emperor.
No one thinks their clothes are beautiful. Everyone secretly thinks they are tools and laughs at their desperation to prove their worth as people through overpriced purchasing.
rotaugen454 wrote: »Not true, otherwise companies would not sell "overpriced" items. The business of business is business, as Milton Friedman would say, and they will do what they can to maximize profits. They aren't out there to be your friend, they are out there to make money. If they make more selling a particular product at a low price, they will. If they will make more selling it at a high price, they will. The future prices of mounts in the game will be a good indicator of what their data is showing them, as opposed to blind guesses by us on the forums.
rotaugen454 wrote: »Not true, otherwise companies would not sell "overpriced" items. The business of business is business, as Milton Friedman would say, and they will do what they can to maximize profits. They aren't out there to be your friend, they are out there to make money. If they make more selling a particular product at a low price, they will. If they will make more selling it at a high price, they will. The future prices of mounts in the game will be a good indicator of what their data is showing them, as opposed to blind guesses by us on the forums.
I could never be friends with ZOS management (ZOS artists and community members sure), because I don't respect them. I think they are greedy and their skill at business is abysmal. At best they are chasing some fad of the moment formula and becoming increasingly desperate as they chase away customers doing it.
What lead people to believe that running an honest business and running a profitable business were mutually exclusive?
I have never heard a single one of the "greed is just good business" crowd explain this beyond "I like money though" or "it's just the way it is."
Obviously it isn't. WoW is obviously the MMO model you are all chasing. They made BILLIONS over a decade and never once stooped to cheap b-rate gambling shop micro transactions to do it.
Explain to me how you think it is just good business to obsessively pursue a model not embraced by the ACTUAL good business?
I'll wait.
rotaugen454 wrote: »If they thought they would make more otherwise, they would do it that way. It's that simple. If they thought they would make more using the WoW model, they would do it. If there isn't enough volume using their current model, they will change it. If it hits projections, they won't. Each consumer has to decide for themselves what value they place on any particular item, and the overall market will dictate what direction things go. That's just how reality works.
GrumpyMuffin wrote: »anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »
The stack them high, sell them cheap model has served Walmart very well for the last fifty years. There is a reason that tesco sell many more beans each week than waitrose in the uk - even when applying a weighting for the differences in store numbers -More people visit the cheaper retailer than the other shop which sells the same items for a higher price.
While talking statistics, I'm also willing to bet the crown store follows the 80/20 model, with 80pc of the sales go to just 20pc of people. It is the 20pc that Zos base decisions on, not the masses.
GrumpyMuffin wrote: »anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »
The stack them high, sell them cheap model has served Walmart very well for the last fifty years. There is a reason that tesco sell many more beans each week than waitrose in the uk. More people visit the cheaper retailer than the other shop which sells the same items for a higher price.
Very true. Only those with the actual sales data can approximately compute it with a reasonable degree of accuracy.anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »GrumpyMuffin wrote: »anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »
The stack them high, sell them cheap model has served Walmart very well for the last fifty years. There is a reason that tesco sell many more beans each week than waitrose in the uk. More people visit the cheaper retailer than the other shop which sells the same items for a higher price.
That's valid for beans. Not necessarily for an ESO mount.
Typically, food products have a very strong elasticity (prices raise => sales drop, and vice-versa), mostly due due a very high interchangeability of goods.
Typically, energy products such as oil have a very low elasticity (people will keep buying it no matter how high prices rise, because they NEED it and it has little to ne replacement)
In some cases, the elasticity is negative (people will buy less if prices drop). That's valid in most luxury business such as perfume, fashion, etc. where a cheap product is perceived as a low quality product.
You don't know the elasticity of a mount is ESO is. Neither do I.
rotaugen454 wrote: »GrumpyMuffin wrote: »anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »
The stack them high, sell them cheap model has served Walmart very well for the last fifty years. There is a reason that tesco sell many more beans each week than waitrose in the uk - even when applying a weighting for the differences in store numbers -More people visit the cheaper retailer than the other shop which sells the same items for a higher price.
While talking statistics, I'm also willing to bet the crown store follows the 80/20 model, with 80pc of the sales go to just 20pc of people. It is the 20pc that Zos base decisions on, not the masses.
Yes, if there were an exact duplicate of ESO selling the same crown store items at lower prices, they would outperform ESO. But we are talking about a purely luxury item, not a loaf of Wonderbread that is exactly the same regardless of what store you buy it at. I can see why the mount is not worth the price to a lot of people. But the righteous indignation is something else. Do these same people go into stores and start shouting at the employees about the prices? It's either buy or don't buy. The aggregate sales will determine what happens next. Getting upset about it won't.
Oh, I get it. No one joined ESO because they heard that they added a cash shop. I also know there are a lot of people who want the mount, but it is priced beyond a level they want to spend, so they yell about it. The game can be played without spending a penny at the cash shop.rotaugen454 wrote: »GrumpyMuffin wrote: »anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »
The stack them high, sell them cheap model has served Walmart very well for the last fifty years. There is a reason that tesco sell many more beans each week than waitrose in the uk - even when applying a weighting for the differences in store numbers -More people visit the cheaper retailer than the other shop which sells the same items for a higher price.
While talking statistics, I'm also willing to bet the crown store follows the 80/20 model, with 80pc of the sales go to just 20pc of people. It is the 20pc that Zos base decisions on, not the masses.
Yes, if there were an exact duplicate of ESO selling the same crown store items at lower prices, they would outperform ESO. But we are talking about a purely luxury item, not a loaf of Wonderbread that is exactly the same regardless of what store you buy it at. I can see why the mount is not worth the price to a lot of people. But the righteous indignation is something else. Do these same people go into stores and start shouting at the employees about the prices? It's either buy or don't buy. The aggregate sales will determine what happens next. Getting upset about it won't.
You don't get it do you? We're not here because of the cash shop. We're here because of the game. The cash shop is something that's added to get at our wallets while we play a game. Something that takes development time and effort that could be re-directed toward making the game better.
Buy/don't buy doesn't even begin to cover it. It's just the simplest of simplistic rationalizations.
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »Man so this company very often tics me off with the crown prices
I know it's nothing people are forced to buy and I behave accordingly. Here's the gripe tho
There is little to nothing highly cosmetically appeasing that's attainable outside of real money.
That's my frustration
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »
Since I always buy crowns when they are on sale, I have a large stack of over 11k sitting around.
I've been looking forward to the Elk forever. I was expecting a 3k crown price tag, which I was happy to pay.
Now I'm undecided if I want it enough to "accept" the obvious price testing. I'm worried if we purchase at 4,500 crowns, all mounts will soon cost that much.
Honestly, I have the crowns, and really the price is $22 if you got the crowns on sale. About the same cost as a date night at the movies. Also, the last several updates have been free, and I don't mind supporting the game.
It's just the future prices I am worried about. There is no way there should have been this big of a price jump for what I consider a base mount. They are trying to see how much they can get away with, and that bothers me. They need more consistent pricing, or an inflation cap...
That's a poor analogy. This isn't about premium mounts being cheaper in other games; this is about inconsistent store pricing in this game. If Starbucks started randomly charging $5 for coffee after consistently charging $2, and people continued to buy their coffee, then yeah, they're suckers. I can buy two full freaking DLCs in this game for cheaper than this mount. Are you people HONESTLY suggesting that the Elk Mount is indeed worth more to you than Dark Brotherhood and Thieves Guild COMBINED?