Shmacky-McNuts: Japanese games have always been overpriced. They also do not consider outside sales to be of any interest to them. In fact, most Japanese people in business rarely consider outside sales of any consequence. Normally, gaijin are the ones pushing them to sell out side Japan.
Do not expect any price drop until xmas....assuming they drop much at all.
That wouldn't surprise me. They have a pretty large and reasonably affluent internal market. They have about 1/3 the population of the US and are pretty well off.
Even in their large urban centers, there doesn't seem to be a lot of pressure to learn English and most people don't (some people who are likely to interact with tourists as part of their work will speak little to medium amounts of English, but that's it).
If I compare that to my own francophone province where we are about 8 millions, most people in Montreal (our main metropolis) speak at least working English and content creators here tend to be very interested in exporting their work to international anglophone markets (because unless you are wildly successful, you'll make relatively lean living on a 8 million people market and you might be somewhat better off if you manage to make inroads across the sea to the 68 millions people living in France, but that is far from a guarantee... a lot of artists don't).
TheBigCore: What also tends to really surprise people is that contrary to what they see in anime, manga, and videogames, Japanese people deep down
loathe all foreigners.
Japanese culture does not at all tolerate those who are different or who "cause trouble for others" and as such, does not want anyone there who disturbs their "social harmony".
[url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wa_(Japanese_culture]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wa_(Japanese_culture[/url])
I didn't get that impression. People I encounter in Japan tend to be pretty polite and helpful. Some are even friendly.
And not only am I a tall bulky non-Japanese who doesn't really speak the language, but I also don't really follow Japanese fashion (for starters, I have a full mustache and beard and I cut my hair pretty infrequently so they tend to be on the long side). In a crowd in Japan, I stick out.
Some people are cold (probably a mix of my different appearance and my not speaking the language well), but there are people like that everywhere and at least there, they are polite enough just to be cold to you and not scream at you to learn their language or go home (something I have seen in North America, though thankfully, infrequently).