cube-europe
Nintendo have dropped the royalty rates on 3rd party games.
With recently weakening 3rd party support Nintendo have decided to reduce the royalty rates that 3rd party developers have to pay to make games on the GameCube. The rates were not stated but NOA's senior vice president of Marketing, Peter Harrison spoke on the matter.
"The biggest games of the year last year were games like GTA and they came from an independent publisher," Harrison said. "We need to make sure that we have good relationships with all the independent publishers, because you never know where the next big hit game is going to come from."
Viene a decir que reducen los royalties a las third party, ya k es necesario mas apoyo de ellas, hay que tener buenas relacciones con todos las compañias, ya k no se sabe de cual de ellas podra venir el proximo "hit"
SpongNews
Exclusive: Nintendo gives EA ‘cost of production plus a dollar’ as others wait
Royalties adjusted as Nintendo fights for market.
We can reveal that in a deal brokered last month, Nintendo offered Electronic Arts a fresh royalty break of the cost of game production, plus $1 US, resulting in the slew of titles announced by Electronic Arts during March.
The deal, which was completed March 5, followed Electronic Arts threatening to immediately cancel all their GameCube projects, as the cost of bringing them to market was too great and the risk too high.
We were in discussions with Nintendo about this story last month, though nothing was confirmed by them. However, George Harrison, Nintendo’s senior vice president, marketing and corporate communications said last night, “The biggest games of the year last year were games like GTA and they came from an independent publisher. We need to make sure that we have good relationships with all the independent publishers, because you never know where the next big hit game is going to come from.”
The ‘cost of production plus a dollar’ figure has been Electronic Art’s mantra since it fell out with Sega over cartridge production over a decade ago. Many industry watchers see the insistence on this royalty price-point as one of the key factors in the firm sitting atop the third-party publisher tree.
Indeed, the EA deal, or one within 10% of it, is expected to be rolled out to all third parties in the coming weeks. However, don’t be under the impression that this move was inspired by anything other than absolute necessity. We can exclusively reveal that Infogrames, Activision, Sega and Vivendi, amongst others, had stated their intention to withdraw from Cube support, in what would have been a killer blow to the console.
Nintendo is also expected to announce a similar move for Game Boy Advance royalty pricing, which insiders lead us to believe will be heavily influenced by the success of Pokemon in the US and Europe. There will also be royalty breaks for any games supporting link-up features between the GBA and the GameCube.
Expect more news on these matters from E3.
Nintendo va a pagar los costes de produccion a EA por sus titulos para gamecube, ademas dara un dolar a EA por cada unidad vendida