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Uhm, GOG? You forgot how to math?

The discount percentages you advertise do not match the prices you charge. Admittedly, the difference is small, but this is very basic math we're talking about. How on earth can you miscalculate a 50% discount?
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50percent.png (321 Kb)
75percent.png (299 Kb)
high rated
It's probably due to the strange compulsion that all prices have to end on a 9. Discounted prices are probably calculated in $, then converted to € and then a 9 is attached to satisfy the market overlords who won't tolerate prices that don't end on a 9.
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Lifthrasil: It's probably due to the strange compulsion that all prices have to end on a 9. Discounted prices are probably calculated in $, then converted to € and then a 9 is attached to satisfy the market overlords who won't tolerate prices that don't end on a 9.
That would be unbelievably stupid, given that the full price is obviously regionally set. You'll notice that both example games have a full price of €19,99.

Edit:
Of course, this is GOG we're talking about, so "unbelievably stupid" doesn't necessarily mean it isn't true.
Post edited March 22, 2016 by Wishbone
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Lifthrasil: It's probably due to the strange compulsion that all prices have to end on a 9. Discounted prices are probably calculated in $, then converted to € and then a 9 is attached to satisfy the market overlords who won't tolerate prices that don't end on a 9.
Half of 19.99 is 9.99. (And it sells better than 10.09.)

edit: TET posted way back that the marketing power of the 9 is a thing borne out by their stats. But 9.99 obviously sells better than 10.09. FFS 10.09 due to the same marketing convention looks closer to 10.99 and therefore 11 than 10. Bad math is bad.
Post edited March 22, 2016 by Starmaker
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Wishbone: Edit:
Of course, this is GOG we're talking about, so "unbelievably stupid" doesn't necessarily mean it isn't true.
Exactly. It has to be some stupid, botched script to screw up the halving of a price. So I was trying to think of something stupid to explain this.
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Wishbone:
If that enrages you, I wont show you GBP slae prices from now and the past then!
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Sachys: If that enrages you, I wont show you GBP slae prices from now and the past then!
Enrages? I think you read a little too much into my post ;-)
Well it's extra money for GOG. 10 cents x each game sold will add up to a lot by the time the sale ends.
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Sachys: If that enrages you, I wont show you GBP slae prices from now and the past then!
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Wishbone: Enrages? I think you read a little too much into my post ;-)
WISHBONE SMASH PUNY MATH FAILURE!
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Wishbone: Enrages? I think you read a little too much into my post ;-)
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Breja: WISHBONE SMASH PUNY MATH FAILURE!
Hey, my avatar may be green, but...
This sale is 70% mental and 40% physical.
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tinyE: This sale is 70% mental and 40% physical.
I thought everything on GOG was completely mental.
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Wishbone: How on earth can you miscalculate a 50% discount?
That's because there are 3 types of GOG employees: those who are good at maths and those who are not.
Post edited March 22, 2016 by ZFR
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Wishbone: Uhm, GOG? You forgot how to math?

The discount percentages you advertise do not match the prices you charge. Admittedly, the difference is small, but this is very basic math we're talking about. How on earth can you miscalculate a 50% discount?
Exploring this mathematically...

10.09 / 19.99 = 0.50475237618809404702351175587794
5.09 / 19.99 = 0.25462731365682841420710355177589

Subtracting each of these from 1.0 in order to get the discount percentage gives:

1.0 - 0.50475237618809404702351175587794 = 0.49524762381190595297648824412206
1.0 - 0.25462731365682841420710355177589 = 0.74537268634317158579289644822411

Rounding each of those off to two decimal places equals: 0.50 or 50%, and 0.75 or 75%, so as decimal fractions to two places or as integer percentages, the values 50% and 75% are at least mathematically accurate. What makes these numbers seem strange however is that it appears as if the sale prices were arrived at in dollar amounts by some other means and the percentage discounts computed from that, rather than what you might expect such as taking a discount percentage and applying it to the base price which is most likely how things are normally done. If that happened, then they would take 19.99 and subtract 50% and 75% from it respectively to arrive at the prices $10.00 ($9.995) and $5.00 ($4.9975), leaving one wondering where that extra 9 cents comes from.

It does leave one wondering how the prices are calculated however as it seems it isn't from taking the price in the local currency and applying a percentage discount to it, but rather taking a discounted price and calculating what the discount amounts to as an integer percentage. In short, it looks odd but is still mathematically correct. :)

The other possibility, is that the way they're calculating things might involve currency conversions and perhaps applies premature rounding too early, causing an error margin that compounds on subsequent calculations that result in an error that is visible above the rounding accuracy.

These last two paragraphs are just a bit of educated speculation on my part though, GOG would have to come forward and disclose their algorithms with us to be sure, but I have to admit - while the percentages shown are mathematically accurate to the degree of expected rounding, they are odd to see and may raise some eyebrows. :)

Update: One further possibility I thought of after posting, was that they might calculate the discount, then round it up to the next .?9 value for marketing purposes. If so that's kind of ugly. If they were going to do that, IMHO a better more balanced way to do it would be using regular rounding mechanics but rounding to the final digit 9 instead of the final digit 0, in which case prices pre-rounded that end with 0.39 or lower would round down to .?9 and .40 and above would round up to the next 0.?9. Clearly though, 50% of $19.99 is $9.995, which if rounded normally to two decimal places would be $10.00, or if rounded to a final digit of 9 as I propose, would cause it to round downward to $9.99 instead of upward to $10.09. So if they are doing rounding to 9s, then they're mathematically doing rounding up rather than rounding off.
Post edited March 22, 2016 by skeletonbow
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Wishbone: Uhm, GOG? You forgot how to math?

The discount percentages you advertise do not match the prices you charge. Admittedly, the difference is small, but this is very basic math we're talking about. How on earth can you miscalculate a 50% discount?
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skeletonbow: Exploring this mathematically...
i read that much and my brain screamed and died

;)