If they can correctly gauge demand, there’s very little risk of them being unable to make 100% sales.
If they can correctly gauge demand, there’s very little risk of them being unable to make 100% sales.
But it still makes no sense to sell far less than what the market would buy.
Not being a big project still doesn’t rationalize underselling the system.
if they can correctly gauge demand and meet it with supply, they’ll sell more units, and therefore make more profit.
that’s definitely gonna happen.
I just don’t expect that I’ll need a scalper. I have my ways.
whatever version you might have played definitely wasn’t finished.
it’ll never happen. the NES and SNES classic were never meant to be big projects for Nintendo. it’s going to be released in September and it’ll be discontinued after December. if you don’t get one now then you’ll never get one.
I fully expect that to happen.
but I’m also aware that this version I have was finished by fans of the game, which is why it’s translated and completed.
Star Fox 2 is literally the only reason I’m buying an SNES Classic.
whatever version of Star Fox 2 you might have isn’t complete.
I’m pretty sure I’m not gonna need a scalper.
last I check I don’t have a Nintendo Switch and I haven’t touched my Nintendo consoles in months. are you sure I’m a fanboy?
It wasn’t officially finished by Nintendo
sadly whatever version you have is unfinished. you can only get the completed game with the SNES Classic.
did you also get Star Fox 2 back in 1996 as well? I’m pretty sure you didn’t.
so I guess most of these people just expect multiplayer games to get a ton of overpriced DLC packs and micro transactions immediately after launch and if it doesn’t then the developers have clearly abandoned it.
you clearly don’t understand how this works and I honestly don’t know how many times I have to say it to you until you understand.