Forum Discussion
Looking just at the logical numbers, removing the emotions of "good or bad game", one needs to have played 25 hours for the $100 game version, and 15 hours for the $60 game version, to have the same ROI (Return in Investment) as a $6 online rented movie that lasts 1.5 hours.
Thus if you only played 2 hours, ROI is extremely poor...yet if you played 100 hours or more, you ROI is extremely high.
So the more you play, the more it cost Dice on server side expenses, and the better your ROI...hmmmm
I find it shocking that Dice/EA has not released some purchase items yet to increase their ROI...
@DeepSixxxx wrote:Looking just at the logical numbers, removing the emotions of "good or bad game", one needs to have played 25 hours for the $100 game version, and 15 hours for the $60 game version, to have the same ROI (Return in Investment) as a $6 online rented movie that lasts 1.5 hours.
Thus if you only played 2 hours, ROI is extremely poor...yet if you played 100 hours or more, you ROI is extremely high.
So the more you play, the more it cost Dice on server side expenses, and the better your ROI...hmmmm
I find it shocking that Dice/EA has not released some purchase items yet to increase their ROI...
I am not sure why you would compare a movie with a video game. I would do something that would have equal representation, maybe like a Dave and Busters. So an average cost of one hour at dave and busters is about $18. So for a $60 game it would be about 3 hours.