Yes. Let the market decide if it's worth $60
It's just funny because there are certain people who decided they were better than the market when it came to TLOU Remake.
Personally I have no problem with what Nintendo deems a good price for a remake, same with Sony. Unfortunately a lot of fake people and anti-PS/anti-Sony folks hold Sony's feet to the fire for business practices they turn a blind eye to when Nintendo does similar or even more egregious in certain cases.
Either be consistent in what you stand for/against or shut your mouth, is what I'd have to say to people who are hypocritical on this stuff, tbh.
I don't understand these silly discussions regarding prices, be it for ports/remasters/remakes or new games. The decision if a game (or anything else, actually) is worth its price, is always personal.
The problem is there's a cottage industry of disingenuous loud-mouthed, toxic gaming figureheads with big platforms who weaponize things like "unfair" high prices for remakes or games in general when Sony does them, but suddenly dip out and go ghost when Nintendo does the same thing.
It's an extension of the misplaced idea that Nintendo does their own thing and don't compete with Microsoft or Sony (this has never once been true; the fact they have had to radically change business approaches multiple times over the years is a
direct result of competing with other platform holders and trying for a new marketing angle), wrapped in a strong sheet of childhood nostalgia. Only now it's been silently weaponized to excuse Nintendo for some of the same business practices Microsoft and (this gen in particular, especially) Sony are criticized for.
And since most of the people who criticize certain business practices like $70 games or remakes they try saying aren't worth the price, are hardcore Xbox/PC fans (some of them with big social media platforms), then it's mainly weaponized against Sony. Unfortunately, all this does is toxify otherwise genuine online gaming discussions, because the people who use these points against Sony aren't interested in actual solutions; they just want to keep repeating it to drill the idea of how anti-consumer and evil they supposedly are as a corporation, as if no other company cares about maximizing profit margins or that somehow a company like Sony is exactly the same as Microsoft in terms of revenue pipelines, heritage, corporate structure or market goals.
Sorry for the mini-rant; I just genuinely dislike disingenuous takes that show clear hypocrisy as if it's bad for one company, but perfectly fine for another. But I'm speaking in a very general sense.