Re: Predatory Gaming Practices

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Sujet : Re: Predatory Gaming Practices
De : noway (at) *nospam* nochance.com (JAB)
Groupes : comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.action
Date : 29. Jun 2024, 09:49:33
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v5ohqu$3rh83$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 27/06/2024 16:16, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jun 2024 09:02:09 +0100, JAB <noway@nochance.com> wrote:
 
On 26/06/2024 20:03, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
Only people with far too little sense and far too much money would
think such a scheme would work. I've no problem with them getting
gouged by mobile gaming companies.
>
Too little sense, splurge a nice chunk of change on an 'infrastructure'
project and then make sure a lot of the money goes back to the royal
family. If anybody complains, invite them for a chat at an embassy and
then kill them, simple.
 There is /some/ logic behind it. Saudi Arabia's income is almost
entirely based on petroleum exports; you know: oil. However, those
resources are limited in quantity (it is reported that Saudi Arabia
reached 'peak oil' production in 2017), and -as the world faces
increasing climate catastrophe because wastefully burning vast amounts
petroleum does nothing good for the atmosphere- people are starting to
buy less of the stuff.
 So Saudia Arabia is /trying/ to leverage their current oil-wealth into
finding new sources of money. Except, when 90% of your territory is
near-worthless, unlivable desert that's a really hard transition.
 Projects like "The Line" are an attempt to challenge this. It's
supposed to be a place of business, a new tech-centric utopia where
all the world's best new ideas come from, a massive trading hub, and a
way for Saudia Arabia to push 170km of otherwise useless land into
some sort of productivity. The drive behind the idea isn't entirely
stupid; it actually is surprising forward-thinking.
 (that it's also a vanity project that 'proves' that utility of the
Saudi royal family to an increasingly unhappy populace is bonus)
 The /implementation/ of that idea, however, is completely bat-shit
stupid and insane. And even Saudi Arabia has finally started to
realize this, as the original 170km project has been scaled back to
2km... and even that is unlikely to be finished.
  On the plus side... I bet it'll make for some awesome video game
locations in the near future. Whether it's "The Line" as promised, or
the half-built and abandoned ruins of "The Line" as it really is,
duking it out with other players in an FPS brawl sounds like a lot of
fun.
  (I had to bring the topic back to video games somehow ;-)
 
A problem I can see for Saudi is that as the petrodollars start to dry up they will no longer be able to afford to rely on a large foreign workforce. It will come as a bit of a shock to many Saudi that they are actually expected to be productive in the jobs to get paid for them.
It was one of the things that amazed me when in Saudi. A large number of very new, and expensive, pick-and-place machines but yet I never once saw them working. You basically had a factory floor where all you would see was the odd person wandering about.

Date Sujet#  Auteur
26 Jun 24 * Predatory Gaming Practices12Spalls Hurgenson
26 Jun 24 +* Re: Predatory Gaming Practices10Kyonshi
26 Jun 24 i`* Re: Predatory Gaming Practices9Mandrake
26 Jun 24 i `* Re: Predatory Gaming Practices8Dimensional Traveler
26 Jun 24 i  `* Re: Predatory Gaming Practices7Mandrake
26 Jun 24 i   `* Re: Predatory Gaming Practices6Spalls Hurgenson
27 Jun 24 i    +- Re: Predatory Gaming Practices1Mandrake
27 Jun 24 i    `* Re: Predatory Gaming Practices4JAB
27 Jun 24 i     `* Re: Predatory Gaming Practices3Spalls Hurgenson
28 Jun 24 i      +- Re: Predatory Gaming Practices1Rin Stowleigh
29 Jun 24 i      `- Re: Predatory Gaming Practices1JAB
26 Jun 24 `- Re: Predatory Gaming Practices1JAB

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