I don't doubt that, but the games are also a way for them to move their own hardware. They likely make a ton more off of licensing for their own system after the install base is solid than they would just throwing their games on someone else's ecosystem. Or at least they used to, they may not be able to make that business model work for much longer.noiseredux wrote:I mean they can charge what people will spend. Mobile games aren't all just F2P or full of ads. Square is charging $15-$25 for ports of their old games. If Ninty were to bring new quality games to the platform I feel like people would gladly pay for them.
I know what Square Enix is doing, but I'm guessing their old games don't bring them nearly the monetization that their other areas do, at least going by number of downloads on Android, for instance.




