• Camelbeard
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    213 hours ago

    No, but I also don’t expect that as a user. It is also fine if the developer makes version 2.0 and I can decide to buy the new version or not. Before the internet this was pretty much how it worked, a new version came on a new floppy or disc you’d buy in a store.

    • @vga@sopuli.xyz
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      10 hours ago

      Then again, application software wasn’t cheap. Given inflation, would you pay a thousand bucks for a lifetime license of a piece of software that didn’t get any updates ever?

      • Camelbeard
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        5 hours ago

        I was too young to really buy software but the most expensive game I bought as a kid was 40 guilders. If use and inflation correction calculator and convert to euros that game in 1995 would be 36 euros in todays money, about 40 dollars. This was a gameboy game.

        A pc game back then was between 50 and 60 dollars (converted with inflation).

        But this was all in a physical store, where you would get an actual box, book, cartridge or disc, etc.