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Xbox Live Pricing Revealed

Xs writes "For those of you wondering how much it will cost to play online when your year of free Xbox Live runs out, listen up. Microsoft has just unveiled their pricing plan for Xbox Live. Pretty cheap, too! You will be given two options: one is to pay for a full year of service, that will cost you $49.99. Second option is to pay by the month, that will set you back $5.99 a month. The Xbox Live starter kit is also getting a new price of $69.99. Plus, MS will also start selling the voice communicators by themselves - they'll retail for $29.99." Sounds like a pretty good deal.

4 of 28 comments (clear)

  1. the trick here by toddhunter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Is to see what the price will be in one or two years time if it takes off. The price was always going to be good to start with. All the better to get as many people using it as possible.

  2. Great News by Babbster · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Before I start my gushing, I will offer this IGN interview which goes into more detail about the changes and includes some digging at the Sony online situation. I really enjoy zealous PR.

    Now that that's out of the way, I'd like to first say "nice job" to Microsoft for not trying to gouge its users by charging something more along the lines of $10 a month for the service. I would also like to thank them for finally revealing this so that Xbox Live proponents like myself can answer what is a very basic question about the service: "How much does it cost after the first year?"

    As a snippy aside, I'll close by saying "I told you so" to the many folks who kept insisting that I was an idiot when I suggested that Microsoft probably wasn't going to significantly increase the price of the service after the first year. There's no telling where it will go in future years - especially if their next console meets with quick success and they have not only the incentive but the ability to gouge XBL users - but Microsoft is demonstrating that they understand how to grow this service instead of turning its users off.

    1. Re:Great News by Babbster · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I write this off for a few reasons:

      1. Microsoft wants to recover the subscription fee (or the bulk of it) with every starter kit purchase. Given the inclusion of a game, demos and hardware, leaving it at the same price means that those subscribers are getting a discount on a service that's already rolling nicely.

      2. The price hike means slightly less pain for Microsoft if current subscribers decide to abandon their current account in favor of getting a new starter kit, because they want the included game, they've ruined their rep on the service or both. They'll still lose a bit on packaging and the software included, but a lot less than if they included the hardware (as in #1).

      3. They can justify charging more (if you consider it a price increase rather than finally getting charged for the hardware) for the service because it will be more mature, have many more subscribers and will have many more games than at the start.

      Finally, I'd just say that the price increase is NOT immediate. You can go out and get a starter kit today for the $50 price with the hardware. Even if you don't want to sign up right away, you can buy it and simply hold it. Unless I'm mistaken, the current version of the kit (the one that comes with Tetris) has a subscription code that can be activated anytime between now and October 31st. By then, there will be a game type to please just about anyone and people who do it this way will still [hopefully] have several months of Halo 2 action(first quarter 2004 is the current release projection). :)

  3. Re:Excuse me? by vaguelyamused · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't think $50.00/year is unreasonable for hack/cheat-free online gaming, something you don't get on the PC. Additionally if you look at the economics of it from a non-PC owner perspective, (You mean I have to spend $1200 on a PC to play Half-Life 2 online but after that it's free?) the X-Box is a pretty good deal (especially after the upcoming price drop). There is practically no motivation for someone who doesn't own a PC to purchase one just to game as opposed to a console. I've really enjoyed PC gaming but the upgrade cycle is can be pretty steep. I've been very tempted to purchase an X-Box, it'll be cheaper than my last video card and a lot cheaper than the upgrades my older PC would need to keep up with the system requirements of some of the newer games.

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