Shurdus
Am I Napoleon?
How do you know how much profit Stardock made on GalCivII?What I said about losing sales to piracy is sheer economics. Everything I say can be backed up by economic theory, which has been applied by the companies I've been mentioning positively.
Valve understands this theory also, as you can see by some of their quotes.
A lot of pirates are in places where the games aren't sold (SE Asia, China), a lot are poor college students who don't have the money. Those people, if you eliminated piracy, aren't going to become customers. They'll just do something else.
The pirates that DO hurt you, are the ones that are WILLING to pay the money for the game, yet pirate- either because they can, or because they're angered due to DRM. The first group are the people who deserve the letters from lawyers, if you can identify them. The second group is your own fault. Civ V is going to make some of that second group. (That's not necessarily saying that 2K made an unprofitable decision in the short term.)
Companies shouldn't waste too much effort going after pirates other then distributors and that first group I mentioned- there's no profit in it, and you gain ill will from doing so.
This is my other concern about Steam. I have monopoly concerns. This is not because Valve is evil, but because Valve is smart. Smart in the same way Microsoft is.
Whenever any digital medium does something stupid, and it's boom ends (See CD's in the first half of last decade and anime in the last half )- they always start to blame piracy, when it's often due to an unwillingness to adapt to market conditions, combined with goods people are less willing to buy. See the Titan quest folks
Also,on the Stardock forums, around the Starforce vs Stardock fiasco (where Starforce linked to torrents of GalCiv II threatening Stardock to use Starforce or we will bury you)- some people came on their forums and said that they bought the game due to that/Stardock's stance. Several pirates also claimed that they were more willing to buy due to that. (those are the damaging pirates). The endgame of that feud was that Starforce has been in decline ever since, as the reaction was so negative that Ubi and some others dropped Starforce. Maybe this isn't symbolic of the genre at large, but it's also possible that the people on those boards are the ones ahead of their time, as Valve was when they made Steam (I may not like Steam's model, but I will say that it was the 2nd best PC business decision of last decade- right behind WoW)
Gal Civ II- sold around 1 mil+ copies. 8 digit profits
Titan Quest- sold about the same. Company goes bankrupt.
I'd say, to me, that proves that Stardock had more business sense then the Titan Quest folks.
A lot of developers in the gaming, and some publishers, aren't very good on the business side of things.
I agree that the things you say about economics sounds logical and such, but what I do nto understand is this:
First you say pirates are not customers. Then you say some pirates are customers, because some people may either pirate or buy a game. If they decide to pirate, then the company loses out on a sale. I can follow your reasoning there. It then completely slips past me why blaming pirates for the need of DRM is marketing spin. Blaming pirates may not be the reason of all reasons, and the discussion of course does not end there, but it is part of the reason.Blaming the pirates is marketing spin. Pirates aren't customers. You only lose a sale due to piracy when someone willing to buy your game normally decides to pirate it instead. The #1 cause of this is ironically anti-piracy measures.
Also you say that the number one cause of people pirating a game is anti-piracy measures... How so? If you can back it up with facts and figures then sure, but if you put it like this it makes no sense. It sounds to me like you make it up. It sounds farfetched that people are willing to go through the trouble to see if a game has piracy protection before deciding to buy or not.
"What? This game comes with some form of anti-piracy? Well, I guess I will not buy it then!"
...
This sounds to me like something a teenager with pimples would do to 'fight the system', but it sounds far from rational.