The ESA tells Game File: "Any one product that a consumer would buy is likely to be subject to many of the tariffs announced, all compounded on top of one another."
It's hard to imagine that the higher prices we're seeing from Nintendo have nothing to do with the tariffs and the lack of transparency of what the tariffs were going to be. So in the end, the consumers pay the price. I struggle to blame Nintendo, they were probably hoping for some clarity to make a good decision, but they had to be defensive with their pricing.
Two user-experiences I enjoy most -- cars and video games -- facing ruin.
Mazda posted an all-time sales record for a single month in March, and enthusiasts have been hoping the upward trend produces a performance vehicle from the Japanese brand -- but in the face of needless tariffs, that dream will end abruptly.
What an end line
It's hard to imagine that the higher prices we're seeing from Nintendo have nothing to do with the tariffs and the lack of transparency of what the tariffs were going to be. So in the end, the consumers pay the price. I struggle to blame Nintendo, they were probably hoping for some clarity to make a good decision, but they had to be defensive with their pricing.
Two user-experiences I enjoy most -- cars and video games -- facing ruin.
Mazda posted an all-time sales record for a single month in March, and enthusiasts have been hoping the upward trend produces a performance vehicle from the Japanese brand -- but in the face of needless tariffs, that dream will end abruptly.