Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Digital Retail Undercutting

Last week, there was a one-day 50% off sale on DDO's new expansion.  There is no box to purchase or mark down, and the client is downloaded through the conventional patcher - I had it fully installed and up to date before I made the purchase.  So, effectively all I was purchasing was the key for access to the expansion content.  This was provided at a 50% discount not by Turbine, but rather by Steam, as their daily deal.

Turbine, perhaps understandably, did little to promote this sale to current players who do not yet own the expansion - I only found out about it when DDO Cast re-tweeted a tweet about the sale.  In fairness, the expansion has been around for a few months now, so most dedicated players probably snagged it at full price.  Personally, I was almost certainly going to wait for a sale anyway, so it's not like I jumped on this instead of paying Turbine directly, though at least they would have gotten to keep the whole $25 through a sale on their own store.

Much like physical retail, the daily deal on steam does get a slot on the frontpage that all steam users see when they log in each day - I have no idea whether the studio provides Steam with a discount in exchange for this coveted placement, but it would not surprise me.  Presumably, being discoverable by steam customers is the primary incentive for games going on the service in the first place, especially for online games that can generate ongoing revenue that cuts out the steam middle man. 

The Secret World's investor update states that increasing distribution through channels that include Steam will somehow help their current predicament.  They may not be the best exemplar, but most MMO studios not named Blizzard seem to think Steam's cut is worthwhile.  They can't all be wrong, can they?

1 comment:

  1. Everything I have read seems to indicate that the payback from getting your game into a Steam Sale is huge. The massive increase in unit sales recoups the reduction in unit price many times over.

    I don't know if this works for other online retailers but I suspect that there are many gamers like me who almost never buy anything that is not on sale. Conversely I will buy a lot of games I have only a limited intention of playing if I see them on sale at a good price.

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