this post was submitted on 14 Sep 2023
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Ok, hear me out. My intuition tells me its because consoles are subsidized. The manufacturer loses money or breakes even in order to make money back in the games sold. I think Nintendo is an exception. So having the additional expense of having to support them harms the hardware subsidy model.
Gotta admit.. That sounds like a "them" problem. If they want to sell it at a loss, that's on them. Make console prices more expensive.
Bring more gamers to the PC & Steam Deck.
Maybe, but why should that exempt them? If the model doesn't work anymore then it doesn't work. Who cares. They'll still sell consoles and make money. They might cost more upfront or something, but they'll still sell them.
I assume that they managed to get it exempted based on piracy concerns.
Frying your console's motherboard attempting to install a mod chip is not a big deal if you can replace it yourself on the cheap.
Even better, it would mean those selling mod chips could just buy the motherboards and sell pre modded motherboards.
Wouldn't that be an argument for right-to-repair? If the user has to buy another console because theirs broke, the company has made twice the loss for the same number of games bought (or fewer, because the user has less money to spend on games). Reparing looks like a win-win here.
Nintendo has been the only game company I've seen be directly vocal against the Right to Repair stuff. 🤔