Ubisoft revises AU$109 Wii titles pricing

Ubisoft titles

A couple of weeks back, we reported that prices of Wii titles in Australia may skyrocket to an alarming AU$109 price tag. To save you the head-splitting currency conversion, that is equivalent to roughly US $84. It was mentioned that most launch titles from Activision, Atari, and Ubisoft will come with a AU$109 price tag. EA, on the other hand is giving out a AU$99 price tag for their titles. It seems that that’s the steep price you pay for quality entertainment and you are left with no choice whatsoever.

It’s a good thing that Ubisoft recently revised their Australian pricing scheme for Wii titles. Ubisoft confirmed that their games would now retail for AU $99.95. The company has seven titles for the Australian Wii debut, some of them titles are Far Cry Vengeance, Red Steel, Splinter Cell: Double Agent, and Rayman Raving Rabbids.

Aside from that confirmation, nothing much was said about the pricing fiasco. The almost AU$100 price tag is still pretty steep, but it’s nice to see that Ubisoft listens to their consumers. Hopefully, other software giants would do the same in the coming weeks.

Via Aussie-Nintendo

Ubisoft titles

A couple of weeks back, we reported that prices of Wii titles in Australia may skyrocket to an alarming AU$109 price tag. To save you the head-splitting currency conversion, that is equivalent to roughly US $84. It was mentioned that most launch titles from Activision, Atari, and Ubisoft will come with a AU$109 price tag. EA, on the other hand is giving out a AU$99 price tag for their titles. It seems that that’s the steep price you pay for quality entertainment and you are left with no choice whatsoever.

It’s a good thing that Ubisoft recently revised their Australian pricing scheme for Wii titles. Ubisoft confirmed that their games would now retail for AU $99.95. The company has seven titles for the Australian Wii debut, some of them titles are Far Cry Vengeance, Red Steel, Splinter Cell: Double Agent, and Rayman Raving Rabbids.

Aside from that confirmation, nothing much was said about the pricing fiasco. The almost AU$100 price tag is still pretty steep, but it’s nice to see that Ubisoft listens to their consumers. Hopefully, other software giants would do the same in the coming weeks.

Via Aussie-Nintendo

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