Nobody told anyone to get the PSP version. If they had it already, that's good, but the tournament didn't care and went on with MAME anyways. Yeah, Konami could have gotten some more money if the PSP version was mandated, but it wasn't. We simply didn't care if it was being sold or not. I don't see the difference between this and a Touhou game.The Coop wrote:Regarding Twin Bee Yahoo! specifically, the argument could certainly be made about the PSP collection. It would boil down to semantics, as the discussion would be about the arcade board original, versus the PSP port. However, if we'd been told to "get" the PSP collection to able to take part, then yes, there would have been an issue (to me anyway). That collection is quite new, and is still making Konami money in retail stores as we speak.
The percentage of people who download a copy and then buy a legal one is pretty small, yeah. However, it's non-zero. I'm probably going to buy copies of PCB and StB soon, and I'd pirated them over a year ago (the only reason I don't have them already is because I don't want to spend too much money at once). This is important, because the number of people who would only buy it if they couldn't pirate it... well, I don't think anyone here would do that. In my mind, it's a pretty small non-zero percentage vs exactly zero.However, what percentage of the people who download such a game do you honestly think are going to go out and buy that new game after they pirated it? Something tells me there's going to be a substantial chunk who will happily keep their downloaded copy, and leave it at that while hiding behind "I wasn't going to buy it anyway, so they're not losing money".
I don't think it's necessary to bar the use of, arguably, the most popular series of doujin games in the tournament because of issues related to piracy. The tournament has not cared about such issues before, and I don't think this should become an issue now. I do respect your opinion, but I don't think including a Touhou game would cause ZUN to lose a sale he would have otherwise had.
(on a tangentially related aside: there is a company out there called Stardock that makes some PC games and has its own online distribution service. Recently they published a game, developed by Ironclad, titled Sins of a Solar Empire. While usually expensive copy-protection is included, Stardock didn't bother, and instead just let pirates do whatever and included an ingame mechanism for purchasing a code online and upgrading a pirated copy to a legit copy. By all accounts, this service has been pretty successful.)



