Also, and I am obviously speaking from my own perspective only, someone else's gain is not our loss.
Hopefully this will be a really good time for a lot of people who perhaps couldn't afford or were not otherwise in a position to buy themselves games.
More people means more creativity, a larger community, more opportunities to innovate and improve.
Today's new simmer may be tomorrow's CC creator, or home decorator, architect, storyteller or a whole load of things yet unseen to us.
Decades ago, when the first CD-ROM's came to the market, they had this almost magical glow of progress, and if you got yourself a CD-ROM and a CD-player, that was the hot stuff.
Now you can go to any yard sale and charity shop and get piles of CDs from music to Bible readings for free, or pennies.
CD's did not become any worse, but technology advanced. Selections grew. Our standards changed. And while we can recognize "this was the hottest stuff back in the day" and we can jam to our fave CD all we want, we can understand why they don't hold the same kind of a price any more than they did when they came on the market. And we can still enjoy them.