DLC is universally infamous in the industry.
It's not though? Bad DLC being bad doesn't mean all DLC is bad. Yes, there's a subset of people who complain, but when I finished, say, Shadow of Mordor I thought to myself "Damn, that was a good game, I hope they make some more content for it soon!". When I played Fall of Cybertron I happily bought the retro weapons pack because it had a gun that made the "Pew pew!" laser sound from the original cartoon. When I got Tomb raider (the reboot), after playing for a while I scanned the DLC list, saw there was a bunch of stuff I wasn't interesting in but one additional Tomb to raid, and so I got only that. I didn't actually like the Daud DLCs for Dishonored, but they seem to be widely regarded as just as good if not better than the main campaign.
More content for games you enjoy is an entirely good thing, although not all DLC is good and even good DLC is not for everyone. The key thing is to be in informed consumer and not blindly reject, or indeed accept, all DLC. People who hates all DLCs will miss out on good DLCs, much as people who hate Steam will miss out on Steam games, but this doesn't mean it's bad to make DLCs or put your games on Steam - in fact they can be great moves for both game developers and game players.
For now people watching the unupdated CK2 store page would think : why would I pay 40€ for a 3 year old game and then have to buy 100€ worth of DLC for the "full game" ?
Why would anyone do this, except to be an outraged hypothetical? It would seem far more reasonable, and this is what I do when buying games, to first check where it's cheapest to buy it then evaluate if I want it enough to spend $X on it. If so: Buy. If not: Add to wishlist and get it on sale. Once I have the game, if I enjoy it I'll check out what the DLCs add and follow a similar process. If the game has been recommended to me by a friend/reviewer/guy on an interwebs forum then they might have mentioned which DLCs are nice to have and what they do, so they might be included in the initial buying evaluation, but it seems pretty strange to stumble upon a game you have never heard of and conclude "WELL I EITHER BUY THIS NOW, FULL PRICE, AND EVERY BIT OF DLC IT HAS OR I IGNORE IT FOREVER!".
Well i guess traditional rules of the market doesn't apply to PDS![]()
I'm fairly sure it's a normal market rule that people are more likely to buy something that's on sale than they are to buy something that is just cheap normally. A $40 game at 75% off screams "Bargain! Buy me!", but a $10 game says "I am probably cheap because I am low quality".