By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Game Chronicle
  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
Reading: After bullishly hiking Xbox games to $80, Microsoft confirms U-turn starting with The Outer Worlds 2
Game ChronicleGame Chronicle
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
Search
  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
Have an existing account? Sign In
Без рубрики

After bullishly hiking Xbox games to $80, Microsoft confirms U-turn starting with The Outer Worlds 2

Автор
Last updated: 23.07.2025 19:04
Автор
3 Min Read
Share
SHARE


Microsoft has walked back on its pervious decision to hike the price of its new first-party Xbox games up to $80 USD this ‘holiday season’, saying it’s sticking to a lower price point “in line with current market conditions”.


Hints of a pricing rethink first emerged earlier today, when Microsoft first-party studio Obsidian Entertainment revealed its upcoming sci-fi action-RPG The Outer Worlds 2 would now cost $69.99 when it launches this October, instead of the previously announced $79.99.


“We have received your SOS via skip drone about the pricing,” it wrote. “As an organisation devoted to making sure that corporations do not go unfettered, we at the Earth Directorate have worked with [REDACTED] to revise the price of The Outer Worlds 2.”


In a follow-up statement provided to Windows Central, Microsoft confirmed the pricing adjustment wasn’t unique to The Outer Worlds 2. “We’re focused on bringing players incredible worlds to explore,” an Xbox spokesperson told the publication, “and will keep our full-priced holiday releases, including The Outer Worlds 2, at $69.99.” It didn’t provide a precise reason for its strategic U-turn, only saying the move was “in line with current market conditions.”


Xbox was, of course, the first major publisher to announced a price increase to $80 for “some” of its new first-party games earlier this year, and Nintendo swiftly followed suit, slapping an $80 price tag on Switch 2 launch title Mario Kart World. At the time, however, the company stressed it would be adopting a “variable pricing” system for its new console and, to date, Mario Kart World is the only Switch 2 game to sport that bumper price tag. And no other publisher has yet followed Xbox’s bullish lead. Even Take-Two, which has long been rumoured to be considering an $80 price tag for GTA 6, has remained firm on its variable pricing stance, pointing to its upcoming $50 Mafia: The Old Country.


And while some in the industry see rising game prices as inevitable, Eurogamer’s Chris Tapsell took at look at the phenomenon earlier this year, noting that soaring prices have a cost beyond buyers’ wallet – the concept of ownership itself.

Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Number of German game companies falls 4% in last year after “years of growth”
Next Article Switch 2 has become the fastest selling video game hardware device in US history, usurping the PS4
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Contact Us

You Might Also Like

Без рубрики

Activision halts development of Call of Duty: Warzone Mobile after just one year

Just a year after release, Activision is "streamlining" and ending…

3 Min Read
Без рубрики

Netflix Games confirms departure of former president and VP of GenAI Mike Verdu

Netflix Games' VP of generative AI, Mike Verdu, has left…

2 Min Read
Без рубрики

ZeniMax union “overwhelmingly” votes to authorise strike if Microsoft contract negotiations drag on

Members of the ZeniMax Workers United union, which is…

5 Min Read
Без рубрики

Fallout and Obsidian veterans ditch open-world game plans as team shrinks to a “skeleton crew”

Wyrdsong, the next game from a team of former Bethesda…

3 Min Read
Game ChronicleGame Chronicle
© 2025 Retro Board Games. All Rights Reserved.
  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?