Well Zig Forums?
Well Zig Forums?
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Sneed
about buck fiddy
too much
$1.50
1.50
is the rule applied only at the base price or applied repercussivly?
1/2A + $1
$1.50 is probably the most correct
>Games are more expensive than they are. How much do they cost?
$2
If it's applied recursively then when does it ever stop? When they start to get to fractions of a cent? I'm scared
this question is sexist
1+ x/2 = x
1=x-x/2
1=x/2
x=2
back to e-school, all of you
66 cents
I've yet to take calc
No answer. Price can be anything.
Plug in any number in place of price and go from there; ex: $50 price; $26 cost.
the game costs 2$
1 + 0.5x = x
1 = 0.5x
2 = x
the same as every other game
$0
based piratefag
There isn't sufficient information.
Price is not the same as cost.
That's entirely based on the specific wording of any consumer based legislation of the country you live in.
Here in Australia it would cost $1 as you cannot affix a variable price to any product with a fluctuating uknown variable, in this case "the price" is a constant of $1, therefore the total cost is $1 and the rest of the contract is null and void.
>anons thinking cost and price are the same
Now I see why I'm in med school and you're not.
Infinite price
Holy based
wrong retard it would be 1$
christ you absolute 2 digit iq morons on this website
3$ dollars
x+1=2x
1=3x
1/x=3
A number divided by 1 is always itself
x=3
Depends on the tax rate
What is this x doing here? OP just told you the game costs $1
The average price for AAA games (garbage) is $60, so 31 bucks.
>he pays for games
kys
Say that again, tranny
You might be the retarded one user, no one thinks cost and price are the same thing, but the wording clearly indicates that there is a mathematical correlation between cost and price.
BASED
Nigga, make up your mind
1 dollar
1+2x = 1.5
2x = .5
x = 1
$1 plus half. It is price.
>but the wording clearly indicates that there is a mathematical correlation between cost and price.
It does the opposite.
infinite money
The answer is $1.50.
>A game costs $1
This explicitly states the game's price is $1.
>plus half its price
Half of $1 is 0.50.
Therefore, $1.50.
>hurr math is Zig Forums
>it's