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Are the f2p games slowly catching up?

Have free-to-play games caught up?

  • Yes

    Votes: 22 44.9%
  • No

    Votes: 27 55.1%

  • Total voters
    49

Spyxos

Member
I've tried several f2p games recently and I was really surprised at how high quality some of them are. Not long ago I felt that the gap to paid games was huge, but the f2p games have caught up quite a bit. You get so much content completely free of charge. Sure, I buy a few skins or characters from time to time, but there's absolutely no pressure and I could play the games in pretty much the same way without spending any money.

And the upcoming Path of Exile 2 seems to be setting new standards. Diablo 4 looks like a joke by comparison. And D4 has a lot of overpriced skins even though it's a full-priced game.
 

TintoConCasera

I bought a sex doll, but I keep it inflated 100% of the time and use it like a regular wife
I'm not a fan of gacha but I appreciate how some of them have been getting better at actual gameplay, like Genshin or ZZZ. There's a mobile Wizardry game that came out not long ago that also seems kinda cool.
 

Big Baller

Al Pachinko, Konami President
Christian Bale Idk GIF
 

diffusionx

Gold Member
There have been good F2P games for a while now, but the fundamental design will always be different.

I've tried several f2p games recently and I was really surprised at how high quality some of them are. Not long ago I felt that the gap to paid games was huge, but the f2p games have caught up quite a bit. You get so much content completely free of charge. Sure, I buy a few skins or characters from time to time, but there's absolutely no pressure and I could play the games in pretty much the same way without spending any money.

And the upcoming Path of Exile 2 seems to be setting new standards. Diablo 4 looks like a joke by comparison. And D4 has a lot of overpriced skins even though it's a full-priced game.
Original PoE made D3 look like a joke too.
 
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Danny Dudekisser

I paid good money for this Dynex!
Even if the mechanics and visuals have improved (which they clearly have), there's still a fundamental misalignment with what traditional games offer. Frankly, I have no interest in playing or even considering playing any of them.
 

bender

What time is it?
Original PoE made D3 look like a joke too.

Say what you will about D3, and lord knows I bagged on it a lot through its' lifespan, but the I don't think any other ARPG feels or controls quite as well on consoles (D4 included, oddly enough). I'm looking forward to trying POE2 though.
 

Pejo

Gold Member
Absolutely they are. It's just a different monetization model at this point, not really indicative of quality of both story or gameplay. There's less "guarantee" money, but much higher potential for F2P games, which is why the eastern regions are actually putting legitimate budget and effort into the games. I think it can definitely exist alongside the traditional games model.

Like this is a f2p mobile/pc game.
 

Spyxos

Member
Absolutely they are. It's just a different monetization model at this point, not really indicative of quality of both story or gameplay. There's less "guarantee" money, but much higher potential for F2P games, which is why the eastern regions are actually putting legitimate budget and effort into the games. I think it can definitely exist alongside the traditional games model.

Like this is a f2p mobile/pc game.

I played it once for an hour or so, I almost fell asleep during the dialog. But it seems to get much better with later content.
 

StereoVsn

Gold Member
Pretty much every gatcha game and most F2P games annoy me way too much with their stupid currency crap, stamina bars and so on.

P2E and Warframe are quite different though. Both weren’t quite what I liked, but you can tell they are good games for their audience.
 

MiguelItUp

Member
Honestly the quality of F2P has improved over the years IMO. But every now and then there will be a F2P game that is the polar opposite. Bad monetization, bad game, etc. Before you know it, it's gone. But the ones that have remained and are popular are for various reasons.
 

Pejo

Gold Member
I played it once for an hour or so, I almost fell asleep during the dialog. But it seems to get much better with later content.
Yep initial launch story, and well everything outside the combat, was rough. It's improved every single patch and is quite good now. There's lots of positive buzz for the big 2.0 release coming up in a month or so, too.
 

ap_puff

Member
Modern F2P games are much more advanced compared to the mobile trash from a decade ago. They have to be because the market is extremely competitive now, you can't win at life by just making some jpg's for people to collect any more. That said, they still have a lot of problems mainly because their monetization model prevents a lot of good storytelling from happening. Episodic content will always mean that storylines will drag out far longer than they should, be filled with unimportant filler, and rely on gimmicks and cliffhangers to keep people interested. It also usually screws up the gameplay loop as they rely on mindless grinding and timegated content to keep people invested. One thing that I do think they do better than most regular paid games is their music though, they're more willing to put experimental and less modern cinematic orchestral forgettable tracks in games. Although, apparently there's a game called Limbus Company that has pretty good writing - I can't personally say anything to it because I'm maxed on gachas right now, but it has a cult following just due to its writing.
 
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Mayar

Member
What do you mean they're catching up? Here we need to clearly divide the market into free to play PC and Mobile.
Purely on the PC market, relative stagnation, the only 2 projects so far that, let's say, have passed the test of time and are still enjoying great popularity are, as was correctly noted, Warframe and POE. From time to time, attempts appear to create a company for them, but so far no one has been able to gain a foothold, there was an attempt from the Koreans to gain a foothold due to The First Descendant, but they did not succeed, the game quickly lost the number of players and on average floats between 7,000-15,000 players, which is also certainly not a tragedy, but the same Warframe, depending on the patch, on average floats at 40,000 - 60,000. With POE, approximately the same situation, timid attempts from the Koreans, not a single success so far.

Mobile free to play is a separate song - as examples of games from Mihoyo were given here, these games are now outselling absolutely all games that go on open sale, on average, Mihoyo games bring in tens of millions every month, depending on the success of banners. Therefore, they are not catching up, they are ahead of the entire market in terms of revenue. Which is actually more alarming than pleasing. The guys are doing so well that they have already expanded the company to 5000+ people =)
 

ap_puff

Member
What do you mean they're catching up? Here we need to clearly divide the market into free to play PC and Mobile.
Purely on the PC market, relative stagnation, the only 2 projects so far that, let's say, have passed the test of time and are still enjoying great popularity are, as was correctly noted, Warframe and POE. From time to time, attempts appear to create a company for them, but so far no one has been able to gain a foothold, there was an attempt from the Koreans to gain a foothold due to The First Descendant, but they did not succeed, the game quickly lost the number of players and on average floats between 7,000-15,000 players, which is also certainly not a tragedy, but the same Warframe, depending on the patch, on average floats at 40,000 - 60,000. With POE, approximately the same situation, timid attempts from the Koreans, not a single success so far.

Mobile free to play is a separate song - as examples of games from Mihoyo were given here, these games are now outselling absolutely all games that go on open sale, on average, Mihoyo games bring in tens of millions every month, depending on the success of banners. Therefore, they are not catching up, they are ahead of the entire market in terms of revenue. Which is actually more alarming than pleasing. The guys are doing so well that they have already expanded the company to 5000+ people =)
fwiw "mobile" games like mihoyo and its new competitors are rapidly shifting towards pc and console as they are becoming more and more demanding to run, because there's a lot of pressure to introduce better looking graphics and more stuff to do, which means a lot of the lower end mobile devices are becoming left behind in ability to run the game. For example we have an OT on Wuthering Waves, a Genshin competitor here. That game barely runs on mobile and got a lot of hatred at launch because of its high device requirements, so now almost all of its playerbase is on PC.
 

Mayar

Member
fwiw "mobile" games like mihoyo and its new competitors are rapidly shifting towards pc and console as they are becoming more and more demanding to run, because there's a lot of pressure to introduce better looking graphics and more stuff to do, which means a lot of the lower end mobile devices are becoming left behind in ability to run the game. For example we have an OT on Wuthering Waves, a Genshin competitor here. That game barely runs on mobile and got a lot of hatred at launch because of its high device requirements, so now almost all of its playerbase is on PC.
Yes, you can play their games on consoles and PCs, but the main revenue comes from phones. I'm too lazy to look for the article, but it seems like 70%, I could be wrong, it was a long time ago. From more recent information, they collected $5 billion from China alone, and that's only Android and iOS and that's only Genshin. Most of the revenue from their games still comes from phones. Players in Asia prefer to play Gacha games on phones rather than PC or Consoles.
 
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ap_puff

Member
Yes, you can play their games on consoles and PCs, but the main revenue comes from phones. I'm too lazy to look for the article, but it seems like 70%, I could be wrong, it was a long time ago. From more recent information, they collected $5 billion from China alone, and that's only Android and iOS and that's only Genshin. Most of the revenue from their games still comes from phones.
That's based on older data, the latest estimates are around 50:50 mobile revenue to console+pc for games industrywide. The difference for Mihoyo may be Honkai Star Rail which is much easier to play on mobile on account of it being turn based.
 

Aenima

Member
Yes.

For story telling, single player games are still the best experience as you get a story with a beginning and ending, while there are F2P games with very good story telling, like Nikke from Shift Up, its a story that might not see a definitive ending untill the devs decide its time to shutdown the servers.
F2P games already catched up in all other departments though.
 
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ap_puff

Member
Yes.

For story telling, single player games are still the best experience. F2P games already catched up in all other departments though.
I would say that a lot of core gameplay loops are and will remain worse than normal single player games because of the monetization though. Equipment, unlocking copies of characters, stat/skill grinding... are all much more of a chore than b2p games because those loops exist to milk the player.
 

Aenima

Member
I would say that a lot of core gameplay loops are and will remain worse than normal single player games because of the monetization though. Equipment, unlocking copies of characters, stat/skill grinding... are all much more of a chore than b2p games because those loops exist to milk the player.
Agree.
 

Men_in_Boxes

Snake Oil Salesman
Honestly, F2P has not only caught up, but has surpassed the quality found in P2P. Too much money in the F2P market and the significantly longer development timeline means the quality is higher. The math is undeniable.
 

Mayar

Member
That's based on older data, the latest estimates are around 50:50 mobile revenue to console+pc for games industrywide. The difference for Mihoyo may be Honkai Star Rail which is much easier to play on mobile on account of it being turn based.
Unfortunately, I can't find a breakdown by players, they haven't done it for a long time as far as I understand, just giving out a general figure, without knowing the figures we can speculate for a very long time, but I don't think it's 50/50 =)
 

DavidGzz

Member
Path of Exile 2 is Free to try...in about a year. Then you need to buy stash unless you're only playing the campaign and quitting. The early access is $30 for half the promised acts...unless you've spent $480 on the first game. Sure, free though. :p
 
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