The whole point of an exchange rate is that it brings the value of items and currency in line between the platforms. Doesn’t really matter if I suddenly have more or less coins, if those coins still only buy the same item.
For a real world example, I live in Canada, where the value of our dollar is less than the American dollar. If I cross the border, I might momentarily look at the prices and think everything is so cheap, but when I do the currency exchange, you quickly see that the prices aren’t really cheaper at all (unless you’re talking about taxes, which is a separate conversation).
This is why everything costs more where I live. Just a tiny bit cheaper than across the border.l I have to drive about 50 miles south to get real US pricing. Wonder if this is “crossplay” lol
Well, if you go up north in Canada, everything costs a lot more, because it’s so much harder to ship goods up there.
I’m pretty sure you live someplace fairly rural, so it’s probably the same issue.
If you go up to the northern territories, it’s shocking how much a vegetable costs.
Nah, I don’t live in a rural area nor a city area. I live in the wilderness.
Well, not “in”. Technically I live right outside of it. My property touches the Pasayten Wilderness and a National Forest. It’s my back yard.
Rural would be between me and urban. Wilderness is wilderness. (531,000 acres of it)
A wilderness is an area of land that has been largely undisturbed by modern human development
Rural = of or relating to the country, country people or life, or agriculture.
Two different things.
I was thinking on Cross play, how do they solve latency? PC would be directly on their servers, how does it work on console? is the game on Xbox servers/access points?
Is there a larger inherent latency because of the in between guys is what I am asking I think?
I’m sorry for being pedantic, but you should have looked up the definition of rural:
“ rural areas consist of open countryside with population densities less than 500 people per square mile and places with fewer than 2,500 people .”
What you call “wilderness” is also defined as rural. They often describe the same thing. Most farmland would also be described as rural, but that doesn’t mean that more remote areas aren’t also called rural.
Getting back to my original post that you seem to not be understanding, the northern areas of Canada (which are described as rural) are even more wild and less populated than where you live.