![]() It's still probably faster and definitely more convenient than driving to a retail store to pick up a game.įor the record, you were totally fucking right. The download wouldn't be finished until tomorrow anyway with the way PSN is. I'll pick it up on my way home from work tomorrow. This is precisely the bottleneck our glorious no retail future has. It's cool that it can be downloaded, but I don't know if I can get behind a 22gb download. Not picking a fight or anything, just curious. Thing is, I've been buying my digital stuff from the US PSN for a while now, since even though when you buy those point cards online, they throw on a 'tax' or something (20 dollar PSN card is 25 dollars online, ends up being about 160 crowns, thus effectively saving me about 4 bucks off of every 20 dollars I spend).Īgain, anyone, if I'm wrong please explain. If I'm wrong, please let me know, but this is something I've been thinking about a bunch lately. Again, 1000 yen is worth around 10 bucks, but the exchange rate is different. The one real exception to all this, that I know of, is Japan, where I've seen digital downloads for about 7000 yen in the Vita store. But the exchange rate between all these currencies is nothing like that. Sure, some things are more expensive, and some things are less so, but the point is that the prices make sense in the countries where the product is sold.ġ0 bucks are worth around 100 crowns. If you buy something in the US which costs 10 bucks, then it costs around 100 crowns here. Now, 60 dollars is more like 400-450 crowns if you exchange it, but that's not the point. In sweden, they are about 600 Swedish crowns. I'm pretty sure that's not how money works. ![]()
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