The European Commision has detailed its plans to outlaw
geoblocking and enforce EU digital price parity. The plans will ensure all
digital content can bought and accessed regardless of what country it’s bought
in, but it also means Europeans could be forced to pay a single price across
all territories - for better or for worse.
As it stands the likes of Steam’s efforts in geoblocking
have seen users restricting from giving or receiving gifts from certain
territories, closing loopholes on cheaper games. If these reforms from the
European Commision become law then this will apply to all digital platforms,
including Steam, Origin, Xbox Live, and PSN.
In theory the illegalisation of geo-blocking should ensure
any digital code bought from around the world will work in a European
territory, but it’s difficult to interpret whether this will in fact be the
case.
Recently it emerged that geo-blocking via Steam could
prevent users from accessing their own games while travelling abroad. These
changes should overwrite this with amendments to copyright law, so content
bought in one region will still be accessible in another.
Finally the European Commision is taking a look at the
curation of content on digital platforms. Clearly it isn’t happy that priority
is being given to some titles over others on storefronts.
“I want to see every consumer getting the best deals and
every business accessing the widest market – wherever they are in Europe,”
said EC president Jean-Claude Juncker. “Exactly a year ago, I promised to
make a fully Digital Single Market one of my top priorities. Today, we are
making good on that promise.”
The cynic in me believes this this will just result in the
raising of pricings to the highest common denominator rather than the “best
deals” for all. Time will tell, but it’ll be interesting to see this one
pans out, and whether we could see standardised prices roll out globally.
Do you think this move is in the best interests of gamers?
Are you expecting a Europe-wide price hike when this comes into force?
No comments:
Post a Comment