Bad News from Slashdot: RIAA Exec Moves to ESA: Gaming

http://games.slashdot.org/games/08/08/21/1758238.shtml

Bad news for us gamers out there, the Record companies are in a panic, and now a guy who advocates 222,000 dollar fines is now moving to the ESA. What does this mean for us? I rather not think about it.

Going to school for this stuff and working in a similar industry, has led me to believe that, the price of games is about equal to the profit needs of game designers. But also a a lot of gauging by the big names out there. It takes any where from 100,000 to a million dollars to make a game. The small game systems are cheaper to make than the bigger system games.

$60 $Million
----- ~ ---------------- average estimate.
1game 5 years of labor

A majority of games are now slop, and mass produced. There is a market for video game sheeple much like prime time TV. I prefer studios that work semi independently from big names, like Bethesda, big huge games, bungie(now independent from Microsoft), Loin Head Studios. These companies are semi free to do what they wish. My concern is with the big publishing houses: EA, Microsoft, Sierra, Ubisoft, and any others I cant think off.

The sports games, racing games, fighting games, and the mass produced sequels and movie games that tend to turn out like crap, are killing the market.

But lets talk about the RIAA stepping into Gaming.
EDD says...

Honestly, before I had scrolled down, I wanted to comment, and I quote "I think RIAA should get out of the entertainment industry and get into excrement industry."

>> ^rottenseed:
I think the RIAA should get out of the entertainment industry and get into the toilet industry.

Also, NordlichtReiter, you forgot to mention some of the biggest names among independent developers - id and Valve. And Crytek, too. And even among the big publishers the former evil-nazi-empire that was EA has finally arrived at a sensible (turning) point in managing their subsidiaries, where they won't be pushing 1 year NFS development cycles anymore and have set up the EA Partners program (all the aforementioned have signed up and given positive feedback),
so I'd say the PC industry is reshaping itself, rather than in a decline, as some would have you believe.

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