Skyrim is an exception to a trend of charging everything in Europe more than it costs in U.S.A.
Check this out: iPhone 4S price for the U.S. is 199 dollars while in Europe it costs 630 euros.
American price:
http://store.apple.com/us/browse/home/shop_iphone/family/iphone?mco=MTc3NzA1NTU
German price:
http://store.apple.com/de/browse/home/shop_iphone/family/iphone
With the exchange rate,630 euros are worth 874 US dollars.
Does that makes any sense to you ?
Actually yes. In the US the price of an iPhone (most cell phones in fact) is subsidized by the service company, in exchange for being locked into a 2 year (usually) contract. On top of which they tack on a bunch of hidden charges. If you want out of your contract early they charge you a few hundred more for "early termination".
Even once the contract is up changing carriers usually means having to change cell phones, since no US carrier will generally agree to unlock your phone for use with another carrier. The old carrier doesn't want to help you switch and the new carrier wants to lock you into a new 2 year contract which thay can't do unless they make you get a subsidized phone.
So yeah, europeans pay more up front but in exchange they have far more freedom to switch and they don't have to pay more per month just for the stupid phone. Both AT&T and T-mobile are GSM carriers in the US, AT&T costs substantially more per month than T-mobile, but you have to risk 'bricking' your iphone to first jailbreak it and then unlock it if you want to be with T-mobile. Even then, you'll have to do it all over again every time you update the OS, and it takes several months after an OS release before hackers break the security on the new OS version. And that's even after you've completed the two year contract with AT&T.
Also, is the euro price with or without VAT?
Personally I'd prefer to pay more for the freedom of picking my carrier and actually having my phone be MINE, but we don't get that option.