Skip to main content

Take-Two says next-generation game price hikes won’t be universal

 

Take-Two Interactive Software hasn’t shied away from plans to sell next-generation video games for $70. But the company’s chief executive cautioned that not every Xbox Series X or PlayStation 5 title will qualify for the premium pricing.

Recommended Videos

Speaking to investors on an earnings call on Monday, Take-Two chief Strauss Zelnick said the company will consider a $10 price hike on next-generation console games on a “title-by-title basis.” Zelnick didn’t say what might ultimately dictate which games will cost $70, but in an earlier interview with GamesIndustry.biz on Monday, he offered some clues at Take-Two’s calculus.

“The pricing has to reflect the quality of the experience,” Zelnick said. He added that the industry has kept a $60 game price point for a “really long time,” despite development costs increasing.

“It costs a great deal more to make those titles,” Zelnick said of the latest games.

There’s been an ongoing debate in the gaming industry over how much next-generation games could — and should — cost. Take-Two has already said that its upcoming NBA 2K21 will cost $70, up from the standard $60 price point its games sell for now, but Ubisoft has said that it doesn’t currently plan to increase its next-generation pricing. Microsoft hasn’t announced prices but has said that it will make all of its Xbox Game Studios titles, including Halo Infinite, available through its Xbox Game Pass subscription service.

Xbox chief Phil Spencer has acknowledged that next-generation development costs will rise, and developers may initially price their games higher but told The Washington Post last month that the market may ultimately dictate final prices.

“As an industry, we can price things whatever we want to price them, and the customer will decide what the right price is for them,” Spencer said. “I’m not negative on people setting a new price point for games because I know everybody’s going to drive their own decisions based on their own business needs. But gamers have more choice today than they ever have. In the end, I know the customer is in control of the price that they pay, and I trust that system.”

Sony’s PlayStation boss Shawn Layden was a bit more supportive of a possible price hike in an interview with GamesIndustry.biz last month.

“It’s been $59.99 since I started in this business, but the cost of games has gone up 10 times,” Layden said of game prices. “If you don’t have elasticity on the price point, but you have huge volatility on the cost line, the model becomes more difficult.”

For now, speculation abounds because prices are still unknown for the vast majority of upcoming games. But publishers won’t stay silent for long — both the Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5 are slated to launch this holiday season.

Don Reisinger
Don Reisinger is a freelance technology, video game, and entertainment journalist. He has been writing about the world of…
I own a PlayStation 5 Pro. It still hasn’t replaced my regular old PS5
A PS5 slim, PS5 Pro, and base PS5 all stand next to each other.

When I first got my PlayStation 5 Pro, I had a whirlwind first week with it. I spent days on end testing as many games as I could to determine how much of an upgrade it really was over my base PS5. I looked at five-minute chunks of games like Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart for hours, comparing every graphics mode on both systems. At the end of my PS5 vs. PS5 Pro testing, the result was clear: The PS5 Pro was indeed the more powerful console and, frankly, the most capable gaming device I had in my entire home.

So why, just two weeks later, am I still using my regular old PS5 so much?

Read more
Your video game consoles could become much more expensive soon
A PS5 Pro sits on a table with a DualSense.

People have a lot of questions about what a second Donald Trump presidential administration will look like, and one of the big concerns surrounds proposed tariffs on foreign imports, with larger ones targeted for China. If these are passed, it could signal a big change in how video game hardware and software is manufactured and could lead to increased costs for players.

Digital Trends spoke to analysts about the potential impact that tariffs could have on tech like game consoles. As of this writing, the proposal is to implement a 10% or 20% tariff on all imports, but a specific 60% tariff on Chinese imports. Some analysts we reached out to declined to comment on the impact of the tariffs because while Trump has discussed a plan, it hasn't gone into effect and might not. Others, like Serkan Toto of Japanese games industry consulting firm Kantan, warned that consumers could be the ones paying the cost if plans go into effect.

Read more
All upcoming PS5 games: 2025 and beyond
The main image for Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet.

The PlayStation 5 has been out for some time now, and its reception has been mostly positive. It includes lots of quality-of-life improvements over its predecessor, the PlayStation 4, such as faster load times, a solid-state drive (SSD) instead of a regular hard disk drive (HDD), and an improved controller in the form of the new DualSense. There's even the PS5 Pro, which boasts even better performance than the base version. However, a console is only as good as the games available on it and, thankfully, the PS5 has you covered on that front as well.

While the machine already has a worthy library of great PS5 games, there are even more to look forward to — most of the best upcoming video games are going to hit PS5. Some will be completely free PS5 games, some will be PS5 exclusives, and others will be completely cross-platform so you can play with friends on Xbox, PC, and Switch.

Read more