The irony of using a Grumpy Cat meme who has made its owner millionaires and they just successfully sued for copyright infringement. But yeah F game makers who want to make money.
There's a difference between wanting a game while also wanting to make money vs making a game just to make money
They make something shitty, or something where rather than making it a good game they make it to get the most money out of you. You don't get the game they hyped up or showed in the trailers without paying more than base game costs which is like a movie having trailers but what they showed stuff from another movie or a sequel that you didn't see even though that's what you paid for.
There are some fair arguments about what value is defined as, what people are willing to pay etc. I'll make it simple- when you design a game it should be self contained and complete. You should give players everything they need to enjoy your game and what you promised should be Included. Adding expansions, content, that's fine, but you should also charge a fair price for that content based relative to the amount of content compared to the base game and the cost to create that content. A quick color pallet swap is not worth even 1/16 a games price. Games must make money so we can get new and better games, but this current model hurts the industry. It lessens consumer trust and could spell the end for big budget titles as people are scared away. It also hurts development instead of helping. Why spend the time and money to create new exciting content when you can make the same profit selling horse armor or simple character re skins? This behavior killed the game industry once before.
*mexican music plays*
They make something shitty, or something where rather than making it a good game they make it to get the most money out of you. You don't get the game they hyped up or showed in the trailers without paying more than base game costs which is like a movie having trailers but what they showed stuff from another movie or a sequel that you didn't see even though that's what you paid for.