GAMING has always been an expensive hobby, and with game and console prices rising every year, it’s hard to keep up.

Not only has the average price of games risen to £70/$70, but many companies charge £100/$100 to play the game a few days before release while also adding in-game purchases.

People are moving away from life size fetus collector's editions...

2

People are moving away from life size fetus collector’s editions…Credit: FinnGamer via YouTube
And instead moving towards high-end books.

2

And instead moving towards high-end books.

This can make prices skyrocket and that’s not including some of the gaudy collector’s editions.

Yet we know that the majority of money from gaming doesn’t come from the games itself.

Microtransactions and in-game purchases certainly make up a huge portion of profits, but you only have to look at Pokémon to see the power of merchandising.

People can get fanatical about their favourite games, meaning that they end up searching for everything they can read on the subject.

More in Gaming Releases

This has led to the popularity of gaming books, in particular, the artistry of gaming coffee table books.

There are plenty of players currently in the game all selling high-end books about gaming with gorgeous covers and interesting reads inside.

Following on from a long history of gaming magazines and guidebooks, these luxury gaming books link what has been consistently seen as a low-brow hobby with a high-brow one.

Bitmap Books were one of the first players in the game, then others like A Profound Waste of Time and Lost in Cult’s Lock-On bridged the gap between magazine and book.

Most read in Gaming

Lost in Cult is the current big player in the scene, and has since branched out into books that the fandoms really want.

The Design Works series takes deep dives into popular indies like Sable, Citizen Sleeper, and most recently the 90-rated film-based game Immortality.

Creator Sam Barlow has been busy recently with a number of big announcements.

Immortality released yesterday (January 24) for PS5, bringing with it a number of new fans, while at the same time he teased two new games on Steam.

Then as a triple punch, Lost in Cult announced the Immortality Design Works with a Deluxe Edition costing £150.

This isn’t even the most expensive item on the shopping list as the next Lock-On featuring art and signed by legendary Final Fantasy artist Yoshitaka Amano costs a whopping £400.

However, this shouldn’t be surprising in a world where people pay £300 for a Starfield watch in a plastic case or £449 for a Dark Souls 3 figurine.

Maybe these high-end books are the way forward for collectors, giving people the beautiful things they love, while also making them useful and long-lasting.

READ MORE SUN STORIES

If you want to read more on how to play Immortality, check out the best games free with Netflix.

Written by Georgina Young on behalf of GLHF.

All the latest Gaming tips and tricks

Looking for tips and tricks across your favourite consoles and games? We have you covered…

This post first appeared on Thesun.co.uk

You May Also Like

Pixel 6 and 6 Pro: Google Says It’s Serious About Smartphones. For Real This Time.

Resume Subscription We are delighted that you’d like to resume your subscription.…

Not so inconceivable after all! Scientists engineer ‘virgin birth’ in female fruit flies after tweaking just THREE genes – so could it be done in humans?

Babies born to women without men may have come a step closer…

All iPhone owners can get a free treat to celebrate big Apple event – here’s how

APPLE has revealed a new wallpaper for customers to celebrate the opening…

Get a FREE Chromebook WORTH £299 with Samsung Galaxy S22 from O2

THE festive season may have passed, but you can still bag yourself…

GAMING has always been an expensive hobby, and with game and console prices rising every year, it’s hard to keep up.

Not only has the average price of games risen to £70/$70, but many companies charge £100/$100 to play the game a few days before release while also adding in-game purchases.

People are moving away from life size fetus collector's editions...

2

People are moving away from life size fetus collector’s editions…Credit: FinnGamer via YouTube
And instead moving towards high-end books.

2

And instead moving towards high-end books.

This can make prices skyrocket and that’s not including some of the gaudy collector’s editions.

Yet we know that the majority of money from gaming doesn’t come from the games itself.

Microtransactions and in-game purchases certainly make up a huge portion of profits, but you only have to look at Pokémon to see the power of merchandising.

People can get fanatical about their favourite games, meaning that they end up searching for everything they can read on the subject.

More in Gaming Releases

This has led to the popularity of gaming books, in particular, the artistry of gaming coffee table books.

There are plenty of players currently in the game all selling high-end books about gaming with gorgeous covers and interesting reads inside.

Following on from a long history of gaming magazines and guidebooks, these luxury gaming books link what has been consistently seen as a low-brow hobby with a high-brow one.

Bitmap Books were one of the first players in the game, then others like A Profound Waste of Time and Lost in Cult’s Lock-On bridged the gap between magazine and book.

Most read in Gaming

Lost in Cult is the current big player in the scene, and has since branched out into books that the fandoms really want.

The Design Works series takes deep dives into popular indies like Sable, Citizen Sleeper, and most recently the 90-rated film-based game Immortality.

Creator Sam Barlow has been busy recently with a number of big announcements.

Immortality released yesterday (January 24) for PS5, bringing with it a number of new fans, while at the same time he teased two new games on Steam.

Then as a triple punch, Lost in Cult announced the Immortality Design Works with a Deluxe Edition costing £150.

This isn’t even the most expensive item on the shopping list as the next Lock-On featuring art and signed by legendary Final Fantasy artist Yoshitaka Amano costs a whopping £400.

However, this shouldn’t be surprising in a world where people pay £300 for a Starfield watch in a plastic case or £449 for a Dark Souls 3 figurine.

Maybe these high-end books are the way forward for collectors, giving people the beautiful things they love, while also making them useful and long-lasting.

READ MORE SUN STORIES

If you want to read more on how to play Immortality, check out the best games free with Netflix.

Written by Georgina Young on behalf of GLHF.

All the latest Gaming tips and tricks

Looking for tips and tricks across your favourite consoles and games? We have you covered…

This post first appeared on Thesun.co.uk

You May Also Like

Inside Facebook’s black market for deadly rifles and even FLAMETHROWERS – despite Mark Zuckerberg’s ban

A MEDIA watchdog has accused Meta of enabling the sale of high-capacity…

Your Sky TV remote has an amazing hidden button you’ve never noticed before

DID you know that the Sky remote has a hidden button which…

PS5 DualSense controller lets you ‘feel’ video games – here’s how it works

PLAYSTATION has created a brand new type of controller for its next-gen…

Is it REALLY happy ever after? Singles are JUST as happy or even happier than married couples, researchers say

Marriage does not make people any happier or healthier than singles, research…