Tag Archives: subscription

World of Warcraft Subscription Numbers Are Higher Now Than at Expansion Launch in a Franchise First – IGN

  1. World of Warcraft Subscription Numbers Are Higher Now Than at Expansion Launch in a Franchise First IGN
  2. World of Warcraft returns to growth with over roughly 7 million players in the lead-up to the ‘The War Within’ expansion Windows Central
  3. Against all odds, World of Warcraft’s subscription price hasn’t changed in 20 years: ‘I’d rather have a big, healthy, happy audience’ than risk driving players away with a price hike, Warcraft boss says PC Gamer
  4. We Finally Know WoW Subscription Numbers Thanks To A Blizzard GDC Talk GameSpot
  5. The number of subscribers that World of Warcraft has today has been revealed, and it is surprising Softonic EN

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We Finally Know WoW Subscription Numbers Thanks To A Blizzard GDC Talk – GameSpot

  1. We Finally Know WoW Subscription Numbers Thanks To A Blizzard GDC Talk GameSpot
  2. World of Warcraft Subscription Numbers Are Higher Now Than at Expansion Launch in a Franchise First IGN
  3. World of Warcraft returns to growth with over roughly 7 million players in the lead-up to the ‘The War Within’ expansion Windows Central
  4. Against all odds, World of Warcraft’s subscription price hasn’t changed in 20 years: ‘I’d rather have a big, healthy, happy audience’ than risk driving players away with a price hike, Warcraft boss says PC Gamer
  5. World of Warcraft’s player count starts growing ahead of War Within expansion Game Developer

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Is the $139 Amazon Prime Subscription Still Worth It? – The Wall Street Journal

  1. Is the $139 Amazon Prime Subscription Still Worth It? The Wall Street Journal
  2. Commercials Are Streaming’s New Norm, and Creators Aren’t Happy: “It’s Almost Worse Than Broadcast” Hollywood Reporter
  3. Amazon Prime users can kiss goodbye a perk that is no longer free TheStreet
  4. Senior Amazon Exec Calls Prime Video Advertising On Scripted Programming “An Important Part Of The Total Business Model” Deadline
  5. Amazon to be ‘disruptive force’ as it begins ad-tier rollout — here’s what’s at stake Yahoo Finance

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Spotify to Launch New Expensive Subscription Plan, Chinese Vendors Bypass US Embargo to Supply Nvidia AI Chips, Eddie Wu To Succeed Daniel Zhang As Alibaba’s CEO: Today’s Top Stories – Yahoo Finance

  1. Spotify to Launch New Expensive Subscription Plan, Chinese Vendors Bypass US Embargo to Supply Nvidia AI Chips, Eddie Wu To Succeed Daniel Zhang As Alibaba’s CEO: Today’s Top Stories Yahoo Finance
  2. Spotify may finally be ready to debut a premium HiFi audio tier Engadget
  3. Spotify’s long-anticipated HiFi tier might require a more expensive subscription The Verge
  4. Spotify plans more expensive subscription tier – Bloomberg News Yahoo Finance
  5. Spotify to Launch New Expensive Subscription Plan, ‘Supremium’, Amid Competition with Apple and Amazon – Benzinga
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Apple is still working on an iPhone subscription service which should arrive… eventually – PhoneArena

  1. Apple is still working on an iPhone subscription service which should arrive… eventually PhoneArena
  2. iPhone hardware subscription program delayed by ‘engineering and technical setbacks’ 9to5Mac
  3. Apple’s iPhone hardware subscription could arrive by March AppleInsider
  4. Apple Eyeing Bigger Role In Consumers’ Financial Lives, Says Gurman; Why It’s A Challenging And Long-Draw Benzinga
  5. Apple’s iPhone Hardware Subscription Service Reportedly Facing Several Setbacks, Forcing It To Be Delayed Wccftech
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Elon Musk Announces More Expensive Subscription For Ad-Free Twitter

Web subscriptions are also available for $8 per month or, at a discount, $84 per year. (File)

Washington:

Twitter boss Elon Musk announced in a series of tweets Saturday that the company’s subscription service would show less advertising to users, including an ad-free tier.

The announcement comes as the social network has faced major economic uncertainty since its takeover by Musk in October.

“Ads are too frequent on Twitter and too big. Taking steps to address both in coming weeks,” Musk posted to his Twitter account Saturday.

And for those who choose it, “there will be a higher priced subscription that allows zero ads,” Musk added.

That would be a radical change in business model from Twitter, which has so far relied on targeted advertising to generate revenue, before launching a paid subscription service in mid-December.

But advertising has been a question mark for Twitter lately, after Musk fired about half of the company’s 7,500-strong workforce late last year. The move sparked concern that the company was insufficiently staffed to carry out content moderation and spooking governments and advertisers.

Musk said his strategy was to massively reduce costs while building up revenue, and that a new subscription service called Twitter Blue, which grants users a sought-after blue verification tick for a fee, would help reach that goal.

The service costs $11 a month in the United States and is available on Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android mobile operating systems, according to a page on the company’s website.

Web subscriptions are also available for $8 per month or, at a discount, $84 per year.

Twitter Blue is currently available in the United States, Canada, Britain, New Zealand, Australia and Japan.

Musk-led Twitter has been riven by chaos, with mass layoffs, the return of banned accounts and the suspension of journalists critical of the South African-born billionaire.

Musk’s takeover also saw a surge in racist or hateful tweets, drawing scrutiny from regulators and chasing away big advertisers, Twitter’s main source of revenue.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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Game Files Suggest A Potential Destiny 2 Premium Monthly Subscription Service

Destiny is and always has been a game with annual expansions since its release in 2014, with smaller expansions (House of Wolves, Warmind, etc) releasing in between. However, with the launch of Destiny 2’s first major expansion — Forsaken, Bungie changed the model from two smaller expansions to seasons, releasing a total of four seasons per year. And now, it looks like the developer is experimenting with a premium subscription service for the game, as some references are found in the game files.

It appears that Bungie was testing a monthly subscription model (similar to games like Final Fantasy XIV) for Destiny 2’s upcoming Lightfall expansion and season 20 which was later scrapped(?) for some reason, uncovered in the game files. Elliott over in the D2 Datamines Discord server shared some file strings with TGP that feature four types of subscriptions for the game.

  • season_20datasubscription_upsell_month1_ad_banner_000_004.v2.tif
  • season_20datasubscription_upsell_month3_ad_banner_000_005.v2.tif
  • season_20datasubscription_upsell_month6_ad_banner_000_006.v2.tif
  • season_20datasubscription_upsell_month12_ad_banner_000_007.v2.tif

As we can see, this clearly suggests that at some point there was a subscription service planned for Lightfall and season 20. The file description says that the subscription model would include “Lightfall, two new dungeons and raids, 1 month of premium content in Destiny 2 Year 6, a new Exotic Sparrow, Quicksilver Storm catalyst and ornament, and Rahool’s Secret Stash: four Exotic accessories and premium materials pack delivered throughout Year 6″.

“Enhance your journey as a New Light with a premium subscription to Destiny 2. Try out the first missions and destinations from Destiny 2: Lightfall, The Witch Queen, Beyond Light and Shadowkeep for free.”

“Prevent the apocalypse by racing Emperor Calus to the edge of the solar system. Brave a new campaign and master Strand, a new subclass. Pre-order now to instantly unlock Quicksilver Storm Exotic weapon and exclusive bonuses.”

Placeholder for Destiny 2 Lightfall Premium. Image: Bungie via Elliott

We don’t know when this was added in the game files but considering it’s for Lightfall and season 20, the best guess is with the launch of Season of Plunder, after the Lightfall showcase event.

Now, even with some direct references to a Destiny 2 subscription service in the game files, we don’t know if this will come to fruition by The Final Shape, or if this is something Bungie plans on adding to the next saga of Destiny. In short, take it with a grain of salt.

As of right now, Bungie has not announced any sort of Destiny 2 premium subscription model for Lightfall or Year 6 in general. The community has been asking for a seasonal revamp in Destiny 2 due to its repetitive level grinding, power creep, and vendor upgrades for months now.

Destiny 2’s Season of the Seraph is going in full swing right now, with its third exotic Revision Zero, now available as part of the new exotic mission that went live earlier this week.

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GM Makes $1,500 OnStar Subscription Mandatory on GMC, Buick, Cadillac Models

If you don’t want to pay for in-car subscriptions every month, no problem: Just pay it all upfront. That’s the line from General Motors today after news spread that it’s making a three-year, $1,500 OnStar connected services subscription a mandatory “option” for new Buick, GMC, and Cadillac Escalade models. The subscription, which enables things like using your phone as a key fob, data-enabled navigation, audio streaming, and Amazon’s Alexa virtual assistant, is still optional on other GM vehicles, with the Premium package running $49.99 a month. But don’t be surprised if this new setup spreads across the automaker’s full portfolio.

Though it’s getting attention today following a Detroit Free Press report, the news of Onstar becoming a mandatory subscription was first reported back on July 5 by GM Authority. The $1,500 charge for OnStar will effectively raise the base prices of these cars, though the exact increase varies from model to model. All Buicks will see a price increase of $1,500. Higher trim GMCs will see an increase of as little as $905 with the Hummer EV getting no MSRP boost. Base model GMC pickups, the Sierra and Canyon, are hit the hardest with a $1,675 increase. By far the most common price hike is $1,500, which also applies to the Cadillac Escalade, Automotive News reports.

Speaking to GM Authority, a spokesperson said making customers pay for the service will “enhance [their] vehicle ownership experience.” They went on to state that “By including this plan as standard equipment on the vehicle, it provides more customer value and a more seamless onboarding experience.” The automaker confirmed to AN that buyers who don’t activate OnStar and have no desire to use the services will not be offered a discount.

The way this change rolled out is a pretty classic GM forced error. Dealer markups aside, new car prices are somewhat insulated from rapid inflation because they’re typically set in annual increments as each new model year comes out. We are now getting into the 2023 lineup launch season, and we are already seeing some hefty price jumps to account for increased supply chain costs. GM could’ve raised all those MSRPs, pinned it on inflation, and offered a free three-year OnStar subscription to soften the blow.

Instead, it’s thrown itself into the melee that is consumers raging about subscription options on new cars with this mandatory option nonsense. It’s not as bad as trying to paywall things like heated seats, as BMW found out recently, nor is it as convoluted as Toyota’s plan to turn its key fob remote start function into a subscription service. But the idea that buyers are forced to pay for something they may not want that was previously an optional subscription is undoubtedly going to raise concerns. And the whole thing feels a bit Orwellian when GM insists on still calling it an “option” being “offered.”

We reached out to GM to ask whether this mandatory subscription model is headed to Chevrolet and other Cadillacs next, and a spokesperson responded by saying the plan “is being offered on new Buick, GMC, and Cadillac Escalades at this time.”

Got a tip or question for the author? You can reach them here: peter@thedrive.com

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Broadcom plans a “rapid transition” to subscription revenue for VMware

Enlarge / A sign in front of a Broadcom office on June 03, 2021, in San Jose, California.

Broadcom announced last week that it was seeking to drop $61 billion in cash and stock to acquire VMware. We still don’t know exactly what changes Broadcom plans to make to VMware’s products or business model once the acquisition completes. Still, Broadcom Software Group President Tom Krause made it clear in Broadcom’s earnings call last week: an emphasis on software subscriptions.

As reported by The Register, Broadcom plans a “rapid transition from perpetual licenses to subscriptions” for VMware’s products, replacing discrete buy-once-use-forever versions, though “rapid” in this case will still apparently take several years. Broadcom CEO Hock Tan said that the company wants to keep VMware’s current customers happy and take advantage of VMware’s existing sales team and relationships.

Subscription-based software has some benefits, including continual updates to patch security flaws and ensure compatibility with new operating system updates—virtualization software that requires low-level hardware access gets broken more often by new OS updates than most other apps. But a move toward more subscription-based software licensing could still be unwelcome news for individuals and businesses who prefer to pay for individual upgrades as they want or need them, rather than continuously for as long as they need the software.

VMware would be far from the first company to prioritize subscription-based software-as-a-service and its more consistent, reliable income stream over perpetually licensed software. Adobe infamously moved its Creative Suite apps to a Creative Cloud subscription model nearly a decade ago, with no remaining options for customers who prefer perpetual licenses. Microsoft still offers perpetual licenses for its Office apps for Mac and Windows (Office 2021 was released in September), but it doesn’t provide all the same features as the continually updated Microsoft 365 version. Even services like PlayStation Plus or Xbox Game Pass are replacing one-time game purchases with ongoing subscriptions.

Broadcom currently plans to use the VMware moniker to replace the Broadcom Software Group branding once the acquisition goes through. The Broadcom Software Group also includes the companies formerly known as CA Technologies and Symantec, which were also billion-dollar buys for Broadcom.

VMware reportedly has 40 days to find a buyer willing to pay more than the $61 billion that Broadcom is offering.

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Apple will let your subscription apps charge you more money without asking

Apple has updated its App Store rules to make it so subscriptions can auto-renew without your explicit permission, even if the developer has raised the monthly or annual price. Before the rule change, users would have to manually opt-into a subscription renewal if it came with a price bump; now, that won’t necessarily be the case, though you’ll still be notified about the price change before it happens. Apple says it’s making the change to help avoid the situation where users unintentionally lose access to a subscription because they missed an opt-in message.

According to Apple’s Monday evening post, there are specific conditions that developers will have to follow if they want to offer what the company is calling “an auto-renewable subscription price increase.” For starters, it can only be so big — Apple’s rules say that if a developer increases a weekly or monthly subscription price by more than 50 percent, and that difference is over $5, it doesn’t qualify. For an annual subscription, devs can still raise the price by 50 percent, but can’t raise it more than $50 USD without requiring an opt-in.

Here are some examples of what that could look like: let’s say I have a subscription that’s $60 a year. The developers could raise it to $90 ($60 plus 50 percent), and it would auto-renew without me having to opt-in. If I have a monthly subscription that’s $15, and the developers wanted to raise it to $22, in theory I’d have to opt-into that — it’s less than a 50 percent increase, but over the $5 cap.

However, Apple’s wording leaves things a bit unclear: what if there’s an app that costs $10 a year, and goes up to $60 a year? Apple’s rules say, verbatim, that consent is needed if the price increase is:

More than 50% of the current price; and

The difference in price exceeds approximately $5 United States Dollar (USD) per period for non-annual subscriptions, or $50 USD per year for annual subscriptions.

Reading that literally, it means that both conditions would have to be true to require an opt-in. But the example scenario seems so ridiculous that it’s hard to believe that’s what Apple intends. We’ve reached out for clarification on this point, and will update if we receive any.

The price can only be raised once per year without requiring an opt-in, which should help prevent scammy apps from slowly increasing their price by a buck or two every other month. Apple also says the price increase has to be “permissible by local law,” though that one was probably a given.

If any of those conditions aren’t met, you’ll still have to opt-in to the price increase, otherwise your subscription will lapse. Apple says that users will be warned about upcoming automatic renewals with price changes by “email, push notifications, and in-app messaging.” It’s worth noting that you could easily turn Apple’s logic on its head: if users were missing those renewal opt-in notices, wouldn’t they also miss these new price change warnings? But it does sound like they’ll be relatively in your face.

We’ve seen evidence that this change was coming — last month, TechCrunch reported that Apple appeared to be testing this change with a Disney Plus price increase. Developer Max Seelemann also posted a screenshot in March showing what one of the notifications looked like, though it’s not clear whether this the final design. At the time, Apple confirmed that it was “piloting a new commerce feature we plan to launch very soon,” and said that it would provide details. It looks like that day is here.

The screenshot from March shows that, near the “OK” button, there’s a link that says “to learn more or cancel, review your subscription.” Apple’s post on Monday says that it “will also notify users of how to view, manage, and cancel subscriptions if preferred,” a promise that would seemingly be fulfilled by that link.

From my point of view, Apple’s definitely making a trade-off here between consumer friendliness and convenience. There are probably a lot of people who will be happy that they won’t have to go and re-subscribe to a thing just because the price went up by a buck and they missed an opt-in prompt.

Personally, though, I like to know where every dollar is going — and since I almost always opt for annual subscriptions, it seems like I’ll have to be on the lookout for apps that could be going up in price by a pretty significant sum (that $60 subscription wasn’t a hypothetical example). There is an easy fix to this: let users pick whether or not they want the auto-renewing price increases instead of deciding for them. In my mind, that’d just be a toggle in the App Store settings that says something like “Always ask for opt-in if price increases,” and turning it on would make it like this change never happened.

Apple didn’t immediately respond to The Verge’s question on whether there were plans to add such a toggle.

Or, if Apple wanted to be really consumer-friendly, it could make it so subscriptions don’t auto-renew by default. As my colleague Sean Hollister pointed out in his piece on how Apple could show it cares about App Store users, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs has a relevant quote (though at the time he was talking about privacy):

Ask them. Ask them every time. Make them tell you to stop asking them if they get tired of your asking them.

With this rule change, Apple has moved one step further away from that.



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