It looks like the Switch 2 pricing strategy was a bit of a miss - with the console market being in dire condition overall (yes, in spite of the PS5s record month in Europe, things are rather grim overall), there's no proper room for several expensive machines aimed at similar demographics. And, as someone mentioned above me; it will only get worse.
I saw someone in another forum making comparisons between the 90s and now, geared towards game and gaming prices. The argument is usually that, when adjusted for inflation, gaming is cheaper today than it was back then. What many fail to take into account is the immense rise of cost-of-living - around these parts, during the same period that average income doubled, housing prices have sextupled. Electric bills are also soaring (I'm paying about 150% more this fall and winter compared to last year), and groceries have increased immensely in price in only 2-3 years. When essentials rise quickly in price, and stay there, we cut luxuries, streaming services have also felt this in their ledgers.
The Xbox numbers are insane, I never imagined they'd be this low at this point in its life. Granted, I didn't think MS would manage Xbox One numbers when all was said and done, mostly due to the above mentioned factors, but this is really sad stuff.
I don't envy the marketing team at Valve when they try to release the Steam Machine into this mess next year.












