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curl-6 said:
Soundwave said:

The bottom line is all hardware platforms are basically getting to the level now where you can spend to your hearts content and bankrupt your studio even on the lower spec platforms, lol.

PS4 level games can cost more than $200 million if you want to pump out Horizon: Forbidden West of GOW 2018 tier visuals, Switch 2 will be able to likely do that and then some, same with tablets, smartphones are getting there.

So really a "retreat" to like PS3 tier visuals isn't going to happen, you're just going to have PS4 tier as your floor for everything and then many studios struggling with really pushing past that floor because the budget quickly balloons out of control if you want to make an epic game.

Even with Square-Enix we're seeing this ... FF7 Rebirth looks fine, but it's not like a monstrous upgrade over FF7 Remake or something that looks any better than Horizon: Forbidden West. 

For the "we love graphics!" studios, fine, great, you can jerk off on graphics even on lower tier platforms now and make games that will rake up a massive bill if that's what you're looking to do, you don't even need the highest end hardware to do that any longer. 

PS4 tier games do not need to cost $200 million plus though.

Nobody is putting a gun to these publishers' heads and forcing them to make every game graphically cutting edge, 50+ hours long, and spared no expense. The mass market is clearly fine with games looking good enough rather than best in class, as the sales charts prove.

There's room on the market for your beautiful showpiece blockbusters and your lengthy expansive adventures, but not every major game needs to follow this path. If you cannot profit from selling a single player game at $70 then you need to rein in your budget. The live service push is about greed, not necessity.

This is true though it is a big issue for AAA game makers since many consumers expect the graphics of those to keep improving at a good pace and if progress there suddenly significantly slows many people will feel disappointed. Like if FF17 barely looks any better than FF16 then that would negatively impact its sales. A company like Square is in a really tough position with this since their big games are expected to have high production values and they're not huge sellers but if they pull back on that sales will decline.

Last edited by Norion - on 12 March 2024