PS4 game prices: what is EA playing at?

FIFA14
The same game costs twice as much on PS4 as it does on PC

Since it emerged that EA was charging an eye-watering £62.99 for some of its downloadable PS4 games, people have been demanding explanations.

Here's one: EA is the worst company in the world and it hates your guts.

Why you'll miss the middlemen

With each new generation of gaming, publishers try to put the prices up - and, after a while, competition brings them down a bit

Sometimes there's a perfectly reasonable explanation for price differences. Ebooks aren't always as cheap as you might hope because retailers have to charge VAT, which doesn't apply to dead trees (although the difference isn't always dramatic: many ebook sellers operate from countries where VAT is much lower than it is in the UK).

Similarly electronic magazines might not be as cheap as you'd expect, because while they don't have the dead-tree distribution costs they often pay huge sums in commission to platform owners such as Apple.

It's the same with games. Console games are more expensive than PC ones because PCs don't levy a commission on each game sold, but Xboxes and PlayStations do. That's why FIFA 14 is currently £31.99 on PC and between £34.99 and £38.99 on Xbox 360 and PS3.

That doesn't explain why FIFA 14 on PS4 is twice the price of the PC version, of course.

All those zeros

More often than not, the explanation for really high prices is that the company's charging as much as it thinks it can get away with.

Firms don't set prices according to what's sensible or what's fair. They set prices based on what they think the market will bear.

CDs used to cost twice as much as they do now (while paying musicians less), and the record industry made huge profits as a result; the industry's current woes aren't because CDs aren't profitable, but because we've largely stopped buying CDs. Early Blu-rays were frighteningly expensive, and the same applied to DVDs before them.

With each new generation of gaming, publishers try to put the prices up - and, after a while, competition brings them down a bit.

Maybe EA has done us a favour. By showing what it'd like you to pay for your games, it's shown us the dark side of digital distribution: if it weren't for retailers undercutting the RRP and gamers selling used games, the prices we've seen on EA titles are the prices you'd pay for absolutely everything.

Technology may be very good at cutting out middlemen, but it's also very good at cutting out competition.

Carrie Marshall

Contributor

Writer, broadcaster, musician and kitchen gadget obsessive Carrie Marshall has been writing about tech since 1998, contributing sage advice and odd opinions to all kinds of magazines and websites as well as writing more than twenty books. Her latest, a love letter to music titled Small Town Joy, is on sale now. She is the singer in spectacularly obscure Glaswegian rock band Unquiet Mind.