- Joined
- Dec 16, 2019
People have been begging for and predicting a crash for nearly 10 years. Probably longer. The crash of 83 wasn't even industry wide or worldwide. It mostly hit the console market in the US.
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Damn I got blown the fuck out. I know there was something up with the Lynx. It was shopped around as a prototype for a while before it was released making even more impressive when you consider how old it actually was.IIRC the 7800 was actually held up due to typical Atari/Commodore company shuffling bullshit happening at the worst possible time.
I have no doubt about that, but it is an objective fact that there was a market crash which Nintendo tailored their NES roll out too (the advanced video system was never released due to similarities to the failed coleco adam expansion). The consumer may have not really noticed the crash as on the consumer side it meant pretty cheap prices for games.If you didn't have Nintendo step in all that would have happened was that someone else would have.
I reflect. Renderware was sometimes used as just a graphics engine (and started out as one) but it also had support for sound, collision, Havok physics, AI and time slicing.You tickled my trap card! RenderWare wasn't an engine, it was middleware that dealt with rendering and things associated with it. And maybe Renderware sputtered out and died with Criterion.
If there is ever another video game crash, it's not going to be caused by the same factors as before and it's certainly not going to look the same. It'll be a result of subscription services flooding peoples' devices with terrible, low-effort content that nobody wants to pay for and the actually good stuff being all exclusive to different services. There's a limit to how many bills people are willing to pay every month, and when you end up paying $15/month to a dozen different services that each only have a few things you want you'll start to wonder if it's really worth it.I've heard about the ever-looming second video game crash for literal decades by now. I'm sure some people somewhere were talking about the music industry crashing in the 70s after the Beatles broke up, disco took over, and vinyl records were starting to be phased out in favor of compact cassettes. Even the advent of the internet forcing the entire global record industry to completely restructure how music is monetized due to the entire echelon becoming unstoppably free didn't crash the industry, despite it changing forever. A second gaming crash won't happen.
But what is looming on the horizon are the problems with subscription services, and how they're all one-size-fits-all platforms that seek to centralize as much as possible. When you pay a flat fee for something like Gamepass, there's no more voting with your wallet. You're going to keep paying your $15 a month no matter what they throw up on there, as long as you have a few games you want to play to keep you placated. This removes incentive to create something truly great, as subscribers will be subsidizing everything on the platform. Why bother with developing the next Fallout New Vegas, when you can save so much more money just farting out some garbage-ass propaganda game your investors will pay you and your team of pajeets to make in Unity? Same reason why there's not much of a drive to make great music when you can put out zero-effort tripe, bot the hell out of it, and get paid on Spotify:
And you damn well know these services will be popular as fuck, and truly unstoppable once they start getting CoD and FIFA. Hope you like subsidizing countless walking simulators about fighting White Supremacy™.
A Battle Royal of Battle Royals and none of them come with cheese.Because it’s all variations of battle royals mode now
It's literally the same shit when people say we need to depopulate the earth in order to save the environment. Every scenario poised by these people come with their personal exceptions and favorites winning out. Essentially everyone who is not them lose big time and they don't.In this day and age, asking for another videogame crash is the goddamn equivalent of a monkey's paw wish, at least that's how i see it.
Lets say for a moment people get their wish, and another videogame crash happens in the near future, EA, Activision, Ubisoft and all those shitty companies go bankrupt, pretty much the AAA industry disappears overnight. And then what? Indies take over? do people really want that? whatever is left of the videogame industry will be way worse than it is now, where most RPGs are Undertale/Earthbound clones, most horror games are FNAF clones, platformers and adventure games devolve into woke visual novels, and countless genres like fighting games would flat out disappear, it would be either that indie shit or Chinese gacha games.
this. the greed of cutting out the middleman and make a bigger cut yourself will always lead to competition (unless we're getting to a point where everything is owned by one entity, but then the market is fucked anyway).If there is ever another video game crash, it's not going to be caused by the same factors as before and it's certainly not going to look the same. It'll be a result of subscription services flooding peoples' devices with terrible, low-effort content that nobody wants to pay for and the actually good stuff being all exclusive to different services. There's a limit to how many bills people are willing to pay every month, and when you end up paying $15/month to a dozen different services that each only have a few things you want you'll start to wonder if it's really worth it.
I see loads of people singing the praises of Game Pass because it has so much quality content right now, but once Sony launches their equivalent and other major players start to follow suit that quality is going to be spread much, much thinner. Just like how Netflix used to have a gold mine of classics and now it's been chiseled away by all of the other big media corps so much that all they have going for them these days is some very uneven original shows.
considering I had more fun with indies than AAA the last few years, I don't see an issue with that.In this day and age, asking for another videogame crash is the goddamn equivalent of a monkey's paw wish, at least that's how i see it.
Lets say for a moment people get their wish, and another videogame crash happens in the near future, EA, Activision, Ubisoft and all those shitty companies go bankrupt, pretty much the AAA industry disappears overnight. And then what? Indies take over? do people really want that? whatever is left of the videogame industry will be way worse than it is now, where most RPGs are Undertale/Earthbound clones, most horror games are FNAF clones, platformers and adventure games devolve into woke visual novels, and countless genres like fighting games would flat out disappear, it would be either that indie shit or Chinese gacha games.
And then shooters are just random milsims I have rarely ever seen CODlike indie shooters recently.In this day and age, asking for another videogame crash is the goddamn equivalent of a monkey's paw wish, at least that's how i see it.
Lets say for a moment people get their wish, and another videogame crash happens in the near future, EA, Activision, Ubisoft and all those shitty companies go bankrupt, pretty much the AAA industry disappears overnight. And then what? Indies take over? do people really want that? whatever is left of the videogame industry will be way worse than it is now, where most RPGs are Undertale/Earthbound clones, most horror games are FNAF clones, platformers and adventure games devolve into woke visual novels, and countless genres like fighting games would flat out disappear, it would be either that indie shit or Chinese gacha games.
- the current state of the industry is, IMO, a castle built on sand. At some point, they won't be able to kick that proverbial can any further down the road, and something will have to give. Do I know what it is, no, and anyone who thinks they do is probably a bullshit artist.The video game crash will happen when the tech bubble/SM bubble bursts.
A reset/adjustment, should have happened over a decade ago. However, thanks to a newly gained audience of 'gamer girl' and 'granny gamer', largely thanks to the push of Microsoft and Nintendo (wii) respectively, it has kicked the crash-can down the road.
Then when those audiences started to collapse, the industry re-adjusted their audience to capture the new-phenomenom of mobile gaming, which is why so many indies are knocking about; cost-effective to make, can be played on multiple platforms and MTX allow for maximum returns. Can succesfully kicked again.
Covid and the lockdowns have been a god-send for the industry, as MTX fatigue was starting to set-in around 2019, especially with the lawsuits going off over FIFA's gambling practices. That's all been forgotten now because people are too scared to go outside. Can kicked in to the long grass.
However, the industry is now built upon superficial and fickle fans, with the vast majority of income coming from MTX, digital downloads and mobile gaming. Many people won't accept it, but the industry has one-foot in the grave. With Nintendo going all-out mobile, Microsoft making a complete cluster-fuck of their launch (again), Sony struggling through their own success - they can't make enough consoles and PC becoming too expensive and cumbersome to bother with the industry is only being propped up by predatory practices and mobile gaming.
Clever companies are trying to diversify in to new tech, namely VR, which will be the safety net that catches some of the industry when it collapses and others are going balls-to-the-wall accelerationism, like Microsoft's gamepass. FWIW i have and enjoy gamepass, but it is accelerating the collapse.
TL;DR - the industry has weaseled out of collapsing for more than a decade, but it is inevitable that it will collapse, unless it can find a cheaper and more widespread technology than mobile gaming. Which it can't. Streaming consoles, streaming services and GAAS are the last ditch attempts at sucking all the life out of the industry before it dies.
TL;DR, TL;DR - The crash is right around the corner, and has been for a decade.
>killing an industry to own a fat man in a wigLeast if the industry does collapse it might finally kill off Jim Sterling's "career"...
Honestly that one’s more of a benefit by proxy - haven’t watched one of Sterlings videos in god knows how long, from poking into his thread it sounds like I haven’t missed much.>killing an industry to own a fat man in a wig
That's a bit much. Especially since what's in decline varies by genre. First Person shooters you could argue they're in stagnation, 3d platformers are a rare sight to how many were once made. Most of the other genres are fine.
Streaming games is a whole different can of worms comparing to streaming movies, games have much bigger file sizes and constantly need to load and reload stuff. Most of America would not be able to handle it even 10 years from now. You have downloads like Xbox allows but even then Gamepass may wind up like netflix where it's stripped away and people go back to hoarding physical media.Honestly that one’s more of a benefit by proxy - haven’t watched one of Sterlings videos in god knows how long, from poking into his thread it sounds like I haven’t missed much.
That aside, yeah - video games themselves are in a fairly alright place. The industry itself might be fucked in the future - imo, once every company gets their own streaming platform we’re probably gonna speedrun to Blood from a Stone