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  3. The Switch 2's price won't be impacted by Japan's new tariffs, but its games might

The Switch 2's price won't be impacted by Japan's new tariffs, but its games might

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  • appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.comA [email protected]

    This is a JRPG an A-JRPG

    M This user is from outside of this forum
    M This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote last edited by [email protected]
    #16

    Its like Skyrim, with wait..

    Yeah I think that's just Skyrim.

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    • agent_karyo@lemmy.worldA [email protected]

      At first I was thinking, why not use "impacted", it sounds a little bit awkward, but I've definitely seen it being used in relatively formal situations (or at least that's what I remember).

      But no, I looked it up and "impacted" should not be used in the sense of affected. TIL.

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      wrote last edited by
      #17

      Impact, impacted, impacts are totally fine for these use cases. As a native English speaker, I'd never heard of these rules against using them that way.

      But even if there is a rule, it doesn't matter; if the terms are used this way and fully understood by both the speaker and listeners, then the rule is void.

      agent_karyo@lemmy.worldA 1 Reply Last reply
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      • E [email protected]

        Impact, impacted, impacts are totally fine for these use cases. As a native English speaker, I'd never heard of these rules against using them that way.

        But even if there is a rule, it doesn't matter; if the terms are used this way and fully understood by both the speaker and listeners, then the rule is void.

        agent_karyo@lemmy.worldA This user is from outside of this forum
        agent_karyo@lemmy.worldA This user is from outside of this forum
        [email protected]
        wrote last edited by
        #18

        For sure, I am just curious. Not to lecture others, for my own knowledge. 🙂

        I see where you are coming from, but as someone who speaks several other languages, I would say there can be benefits to lanagauge rules.

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        • agent_karyo@lemmy.worldA [email protected]

          For sure, I am just curious. Not to lecture others, for my own knowledge. 🙂

          I see where you are coming from, but as someone who speaks several other languages, I would say there can be benefits to lanagauge rules.

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          wrote last edited by [email protected]
          #19

          That makes sense! I am a rule enjoyer, I guess I was responding more to the thread than to you in particular. It is good to be aware of the rules, but I also think they can sometimes hinder natural communication and create confusion.

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          • agent_karyo@lemmy.worldA [email protected]

            At first I was thinking, why not use "impacted", it sounds a little bit awkward, but I've definitely seen it being used in relatively formal situations (or at least that's what I remember).

            But no, I looked it up and "impacted" should not be used in the sense of affected. TIL.

            D This user is from outside of this forum
            D This user is from outside of this forum
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            wrote last edited by
            #20

            Wow, reading this has a huge impact on me...

            While the definition may disagree, I would argue that language is constantly evolving, and the actual meaning of words is based on how you use them.

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            • M [email protected]

              In some cases 'they do' (they don't) as the tariffs imposed may well be enough to stop people buying X at 150-200% of normal price, if selling X to US was a big enough chunk of BizY's business, then that does impact the target country, not just US citizens.

              In all cases US citizens hurt, but in a few the target country does too.

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              wrote last edited by
              #21

              That's basically the point of a tariff; to discourage people from buying foreign goods and to encourage production and sale of domestic goods instead.

              The only times it doesn't work correctly is when too much of the general populace refuses to do the work necessary to create production, domestic regulations make production locally too prohibitively expensive, and/or when domestic product manufacturers raise their prices to match the new higher tariffed prices, effectively cancelling the intended benefits of a tariff.

              The USA right now is kinda seeing the effects of all 3. It has been so reliant on imports for such a long time that trying to cut that off all at once is having a more pronounced effect than if its import reliance was curtailed more slowly and started a while ago. And since there is no regulation (AFAIK) saying that domestic good prices cannot raise to match imported good prices when tariffed, that doesn't help either. Businesses want the most money, and if all the other options for a product are $150 and their domestic one is only $50, without law saying they can't match those other prices businesses feel like they are leaving $100 on the table.

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              • K [email protected]

                What do they mean by Japan's tariffs? It's not ours, it's the stupid Americans that's imposing them.

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                wrote last edited by
                #22

                Well, Nintendo increased the sale price on NS2 in Europe and Australia to compensate for the tariffs in the US, so they could keep the end-user price down for US consumers even with tariffs. This effectively shifted the cost of the tariffs to European and Australian consumers, which is why I have sworn off Nintendo for good.

                K 1 Reply Last reply
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                • D [email protected]

                  Well, Nintendo increased the sale price on NS2 in Europe and Australia to compensate for the tariffs in the US, so they could keep the end-user price down for US consumers even with tariffs. This effectively shifted the cost of the tariffs to European and Australian consumers, which is why I have sworn off Nintendo for good.

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                  wrote last edited by
                  #23

                  I get that Nintendo's policy is fucking you and the good friends in Europe and Australia, but it still makes the title misleading. My (Japanese) government didn't impose the tariff on Nintendo products — the Americans' did.

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                  • F [email protected]
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                    wrote last edited by
                    #24

                    The Switch 2 seems doomed to fail. “Fastest selling console yet” isn’t much to say when your loyal base is huge. But as in most things the Pareto principle applies to sales, and most sales of any product comes from casual buyers. I don’t see casual buyers putting up with this. Parents might just buy mobile games for their kids, and teenagers and adults might as well just buy a PC handheld.

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                    • K [email protected]

                      I get that Nintendo's policy is fucking you and the good friends in Europe and Australia, but it still makes the title misleading. My (Japanese) government didn't impose the tariff on Nintendo products — the Americans' did.

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                      wrote last edited by
                      #25

                      Oh right - the journalist screwed it up. I just got angry about Nintendo’s response to the “American Import Taxes” I ended up grumbling about that. Sony did the same thing, so console gaming is becoming more ethically restrictive. 😞

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