And good for my wallet...Good for you mate.
And good for my wallet...Good for you mate.
Indeed, winning!And good for my wallet...
If the share price goes up or down, it doesn't materially alter FD's fortunes (UK stock doesn't actually reflect the value of the company, just how much fools are willing to trade the stock for - if someone sells a £million worth of shares, the company hasn't had a nibble of that value) I'd imagine some traders were unhappy when FD's value tanked, but then, if you gamble, sometimes you loseI don't see how suggesting that having a company valued at $1bn being reduced to a value of $100m is somehow nothing is based in any sort of reality.
Thanks for you responses @Paul_Crowther it would have been greatly appreciated .@Paul_Crowther is there any chance that the consoles versions on legacy are going to get at least the Decal ? We are still part of the Elite Journey of 40 years.
I appreciate that this may not have been thought necessary and I'm fully aware we are on critical fixes only.
And I'm not sure if there is too much of a difference between legacy and live. Even if you could ask the question it would be appreciated??
Thanks
My guess is it's Frontier's marketing team. I get the feeling it works. If you put time limits on a deal, punters are more likely to buy"The Anniversary cosmetics will be available until 21st October."
Help me understand this. Why even take them off the store? Someone, even at those prices, might want to buy 1 per month.
These a really nice liveries and I don't understand the thinking behind making them available for a limited time. Isn't that a depriving yourself of potential sales?
Same with any 'limited time' or 'limited amount' cosmetics. I'm not talking about Halloween or Christmas stuff, but things like this.
And surely after all this time you can make the Cobra MkIV available to everyone now.
Meh, what do I know.
Not for me. I can't afford to buy all the one's I'd want in one go. As such I won't be able to buy them before the 21st.If you put time limits on a deal, punters are more likely to buy
"The Anniversary cosmetics will be available until 21st October."
Help me understand this. Why even take them off the store? Someone, even at those prices, might want to buy 1 per month.
I agree. I thought we were done with FOMO. It's a real pity that these skins won't be able to be bought in the future. I'd potentially like them for all ships, but there's no way I'm buying 400,000 Arx to get them before they become unavailable, but I'd quite possibly buy them every once in a while.
My guess is it's Frontier's marketing team. I get the feeling it works. If you put time limits on a deal, punters are more likely to buy
But it has the opposite effect on me. Whenever I hear "Hurry, this is a limited time offer!" it makes me less inclined to part with my money, because it makes me think I'm dealing with a high-pressure salesman who is only interested in closing the deal
And surely after all this time you can make the Cobra MkIV available to everyone now.
Meh, what do I know.
So doing adds value in the long term, by leaving them as permanently accessible you reduce their long term value enormously, not to FDev or the share holders, but to the person who bought them; They will mean more to the owner due to their relative scarcity."The Anniversary cosmetics will be available until 21st October."
Help me understand this. Why even take them off the store? Someone, even at those prices, might want to buy 1 per month.
These a really nice liveries and I don't understand the thinking behind making them available for a limited time. Isn't that just depriving yourself of potential sales?
Same with any 'limited time' or 'limited amount' cosmetics. I'm not talking about Halloween or Christmas stuff, but things like this.
And surely after all this time you can make the Cobra MkIV available to everyone now.
Meh, what do I know.
Again, wild speculation on my part.. The best marketers are old experienced people, and they'd be brought up with the idea that shelf space is expensive. We live in a digital cyberspace age universe of zeroes and ones being commercial products, and these old style marketers are still following the "hurry while stocks last" way of thinking. The cost to store a string of numbers is negligible... but even tho these marketers might be making a mistake about synthetic scarcity, the other skills they bring to the table outweigh this mistake, and so it goes unnoticedHi
I agree, to look at it another way, why actually limit your income to within a time frame. It's like saying or thinking along the lines of ' I've got a million items for sale that I'd really like to sell now, because I'd really like the income, but I'm practically going to actually limit my sales to a few hundred, because of this time limit I've set for myself'.
...Shooting oneself in the foot?
Fear of missing out?...seems this marketing ploy's still being used, but it's starting to irritate.
I wouldn't know if it works, Arx sales would be the judge of that though in this instance. Yeah, I get what you mean (I think)..."Fool me once shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me"...sort of.
Ah, now that (to my way of thinking) is a bit different from the sale of ship skins and early access stuff. Players were rewarded (as you probably know) with that ship for this reason...Quote.
"For a limited time all existing Elite Dangerous players will receive a £10 loyalty discount plus the exclusive Cobra Mark IV ship when ordering the Elite Dangerous: Horizons through the Frontier Store. Discount will be automatically applied at checkout. Those who take advantage of this offer will be able to purchase the Cobra MkIV in-game when Elite Dangerous: Horizons lands."
The Ship is unique / exclusive to the players who took advantage of this offer, Frontier kept their word on that to this day, and personally I agree with that, (and no, I haven't got the Mk 4 btw.).
I think I've mentioned this before somewhere......but anyway, why don't Frontier create another Cobra, a Mk5!...I'm sure it would sell given some more 'unique' quality's.
"For a limited time"
Jack![]()
I agree with you here. But no, these voices are still there, ever present.And about the Cobra Mk4.. it's been long enough now. I'm hoping those voices in the forums that yelled "they gotta keep their word!" have now faded and left. I didn't particularly want the ship. If they break their promise about making other players miserable so I could smarm over them, then that's fine by me. I got a whole heap of other promises I'd rather they kept
This.And about the Cobra Mk4.. it's been long enough now. I'm hoping those voices in the forums that yelled "they gotta keep their word!" have now faded and left. I didn't particularly want the ship. If they break their promise about making other players miserable so I could smarm over them, then that's fine by me. I got a whole heap of other promises I'd rather they kept
For the technical reason that money changed hands over the Cobra IV promise, which was about something they had already implemented, so that's considerably more solid ... whereas a "promise" to bring out some future thing on some timescale is just marketing until you've actually got the opportunity to buy it. Console players can be upset at how things have worked out, but because what they've lost in a financial sense is just the future opportunity to give Frontier more money, it's not the same.Why should keeping this promise matter to anyone when they're surrounded by broken promises about far more important things?