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Pro Evolution 2009
After the ‘news’ that the Pro Evolution 2009 demo will be released on Xbox 360 and Playstation 3 on September 11th, everyone has been pretty excited, including me. It was this news that prompted me to properly check out all of the game videos. It left me, if I’m honest, 50% hopeful and 50% disappointed. As PES fans, we seem to hype up the newest, out coming edition so much that when it does arrive, it has a tendency to disappoint, especially if you’ve been looking forward to it for half a year. Or as it seems after the release of PES ’08, over a year! Whilst I was slightly impressed with the new gameplay videos, a part of me was still expecting the ultimate PES edition, whereas it looks like a slightly improved version of Pro Evolution ’08; slowed down a bit, with some more weather effects and improved graphics. Of course I am not going to judge until I get to play the demo, and I would urge others not to either. This time next week eh…
EDIT; Please note – this demo date is the one generally accepted by the majority of people as true so far. I have to make the point that for all the people who come on this website and start slating us by saying things such as ‘‘This website is always about a day slower than WENB, do you just nick their articles’’ and such; WENB just posted a blog about the demo saying that the September 11th release date might not actually happen. Pesgaming.com is a site that – on the whole – aims to produce news on true fact, and not rumour, and this is the reason why.
Following on
Following on from last week’s article about whether games are fairly priced, I received some feedback from people in other countries which surprised me. There’s a lot of numbers in the following part of the article, but I’ve tried to set it out as simply as I can! The first comment from someone outside of the UK or US on the subject was from ‘dude’ who informed me that a game where he lived, Romania, would be around $55; the same as in America. But it is here that I realised how much of a difference the daily wage makes; in Romania, it’s around $10 (£5), whereas where I live in the UK, is around £40. So whereas ‘dude’ would be spending almost two week’s wages on a single game, I would be spending one day’s.
It’s the equivalent of me spending £320 on a new game. In my naivety, I didn’t really think games could be so expensive, let alone more.
Then ‘Jorge2112’ from Brazil also put his two cents in. Over there, a new game costs around $135 (£67). And their minimum wage is $280 (£140) a month. That’s $70 a week, or $14 (£7) a day assuming it’s a 5-day a week working culture. This means that for every 9 and a half days he works, he’s able to afford a new game. That’s the equivalent of me paying £380 for a new game.
Jorge then went on to say that piracy was obviously rife in Brazil, and that a pirate game would be around $6-12. It’s this which makes me completely understand piracy in other countries.
My opinion is that games in the UK and US are fairly priced, and although the companies make huge profits, especially from the big games, they could easily raise the prices and we’d still snap up their games. A day’s work for a computer game doesn’t really seem to me to be that unfair. However, with it not making business sense for the retailers to price their games at the same ratio for other countries, I can see how piracy and frustration grow in other countries.
If I’ve got any of that maths really wrong, please comment and I’ll edit it!
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يه خبري كه تو يه سايت خوندم نوشته بود كه علاوه بر aresenal-manchester-chelsia- liverpoll دو تيم تاتنهام و نيوكاسل هم ليسانس گرفته اند.
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راستي آخرش من نفهميدم كه اين ليسانس اسپانيا چي شد؟
فقط لوگو لاليگا عوض شده و نميتونه از نام la liga استفاده كنه و يا لوگو تمام باشگاه هاي اسپانيا عوض شده؟