By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
CrazyGamer2017 said:
COKTOE said:

The percentages are derived from each individual trophy list a game has, which is mostly a regional thing. They can be divided up in all kinds of ways though. EDF 4.1 for example has 2 trophy lists, one for Japan, and another for the rest of the world. Which is a pretty big region. :) They both have different plat completion percentages. So it's "by trophy list". Most games have 2 or 3 lists. A few even have 4, like Armored Core V for the PS3, but that's pretty rare. I thiiiink there are an equally small amount of games with a single, worldwide list. Monster Hunter World looks like it does, but I can't confirm it 100%

One important follow-up question: Do you suppose or guess this or is this factual information that you have?

Assuming you are right, this means that it is roughly tantamount to being per-continent/region as I can't imagine any given game having two lists in a same region with the exception of world wide lists and other types of arbitrarily divided lists.

So for most games and living in Europe I can assume any given rarity pans out to the entire EU which is better than my suspicions of the rarity being for my country only which is a small country and thus the rarity ratio, had the list only been for my country alone, not being that remarkable.

It is factual information. I wouldn't type all that out unless I was sure, or in the early stages of dementia. Thankfully it's the former and not the latter. :) Like I mentioned, the different regions have individual lists, and because of this, different trophy completion percentages. It's easily verifiable. I don't have the time to post screenshots, but trust me. Using EDF 4.1 as an example again, the Japanese trophy list has a plat attainment of 0.4%, and the Rest Of World list has an attainment of 0.2%

Last edited by COKTOE - on 27 August 2019

- "If you have the heart of a true winner, you can always get more pissed off than some other asshole."