Former Blizzard boss suggests players should be able to ‘tip’ devs after finishing a game

Authored by videogameschronicle.com and submitted by johanas25

Former Blizzard president Mike Ybarra has suggested that players should be able to tip developers after completing a game.

Speaking on X, Ybarra said: “When I beat a game, there are some that just leave me in awe of how amazing the experience was.

“I’ve often thought ‘I wish I could give these folks another $10 or $20 because it was worth more than my initial $70 and they didn’t try to nickel and dime me every second’.”

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Ybarra is quick to point out in the same post that “most will dislike the idea,” and that “we are tired of tipping in everything else – but I view this different from a pressure to tip type scenario.”

Ybarra lists games such as Horizon: Zero Dawn, God of War, Red Dead Redemption 2, Baldur’s Gate 2, and Elden Ring as examples of games that have made him consider this tipping model.

While many independent developers have virtual tip jars, or ways to donate to the studio, it’s a rarity in big budget gaming.

A user responding to Ybarra suggested that if one was to enjoy a game that much, they could gift a friend the game on Steam, thus buying it twice.

This generation of home consoles saw publishers raise prices to $70 in the majority of cases, citing economic changes and skyrocking development costs.

However, players have routinely expressed frustration at companies charging that much for games, and then implementing microtransactions on top of that $70 fee.

Aware of the backlash from players, some publishers have launched microtransaction stores post-release, seemingly in an effort for them not to be highlighted as part of the review process from media.

However, this hasn’t always been successful. Recently, Tekken players expressed huge frustration to developer Namco Bandai for the introduction of the Tekken Fight Pass.

Ybarra’s former employer Blizzard largely operates on a subscription-based model for it’s biggest title, World of Warcraft, but it also regularly sells skins and other items in Overwatch 2, and card packs in Hearthstone.

supified on April 14th, 2024 at 18:21 UTC »

Nope. Tipping culture needs to die, it is just a means of big companies to steal wages. The instant we can tip devs the companies will start paying them less and it will in essence be us tipping the shareholders. Down with tipping.

Mayflower023 on April 14th, 2024 at 18:11 UTC »

Average blizzard employee

Nastybirdy on April 14th, 2024 at 17:57 UTC »

Oh yeah, sure, I'm going to tip the devs after I pay £130 for your game that comes out half-baked and requires massive patches to fix, probably with features missing, complete with season pass, battlepass and an extra $150 of DLC.

Get fucked.