IAmSinistar: For myself it's not envy but a desire for equity. I don't object to local pricing when it is done sensibly. But in this case it is not.
Sarisio: Such approach often ends like in "Animal Farm" - "all animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others". Don't fight against something which might hurt you back eventually. If you ever knew what is poverty, you'd never write such a thing, and you'd have different view on fairness and "equity".
1. Flat pricing makes sense. As I keep saying, if you go buy a loaf of bread from the corner store, the cashier won't ask for your ID and charge you according to the street you live on, yet in case of games from digital stores, that's exactly what happens.
2. While we stick to the finance-based economic model (which we shouldn't, but anyway), discounts can be given to the poor, sure. But:
a) Wealth is determined individually. There are wealthy people in poor countries and poor people in wealthy countries. Lots and lots of them.
b) Kindly explain to me why Russia's poor (well, all Russians, but anyway, let's go with that) deserve a discount but India's poor or Nigeria's poor or Vietnam's or Sudan's or Haiti's etc. don't. If you give a discount based on that, then give it to all of Africa too, and to most of Asia (excepting Japan and South Korea, probably), and to South America, and to likely all small island nations, and to Eastern Europe, and to Mexico, and now to Greece too...
PS: And you were talking of less than $100 a month after taxes and bills. Well then what of
this, percentage of people at less than $2 / day, so less than about $60 a month, total (latest available data, 2010 or later, a whole lot don't have any listed in this range):
Madagascar: 95.1%
Malawi: 88.1%
Zambia: 86.6%
Sierra Leone: 82.5%
Rwanda: 82.3%
Nigeria: 82.2%
Mali: 78.8%
Bangladesh: 76.5%
Niger: 76.1%
Benin: 74.3%
Lesotho: 73.4%
Sao Tome and Principe: 73.1%
Tanzania: 73%
Togo: 72.8%
Guinea: 72.7%
Ethiopia: 72.2%
Uganda: 62.9%
Lao: 62%
Chad: 60.5%
Senegal: 60.3%
India: 59.2%
Congo: 57.3%
Nepal: 56%
Pakistan: 50.7%
Indonesia: 43.3%
Philippines: 41.7%
Cambodia: 41.3%
So why don't they get discounts too?