Exhuminator wrote:So far it seems that once you buy a game, 95% of you keep it forever. That's a higher percentage than I expected. Is it the same for when you buy a DVD, CD, or book? Or is this just a video game thing?
CDs: Yeah, I keep them, but I also rarely buy cds these days. I usually only pick them up for artists I particularly love anyway, and while I listen to them a few times at first, in the end I rip them to digital for the sake of convenience and place them on the shelf. I don't have many cds though and never did in the first place.
DVDs: I keep them unless I don't care for the movie/show in question, which can change over time. Sometimes I buy something on a whim and regret it, so there's that too. I really like having complete series sets of my favorite shows though, and that sort of thing gets priority over movies. Generally though I don't have a whole lot of dvds/blu rays, especially compared to someone who actively collects them.
Regarding both formats though, I don't get super attached, and I'd have little trouble trimming the hell out of both collections if necessary. But...
Books: Oh I keep my books. I absolutely love to read, and if I get distracted from video games, its usually because of a book. I also love the tactical experience from actual books, from the feel to the smell to the diverse look of them lined up on my bookshelves. Any sort of digital format is simply no substitute, and while I think the reader devices are nifty, there's no place for them in my house. I'm very pleased with my personal library and only want it to grow.
There are very rare occasions where I sell books, usually after severely misjudging whether or not I'll enjoy a given title. But the number of books I've gotten rid of is certainly very small. I'd guess fewer than 20 over the course of the past 10 years.
It is also worth noting that I usually carry a book with me anywhere I go, (2 or 3 come along on vacations). I say this because most of my books have come on "adventures" with me, and I freely admit to becoming directly attached to them. I do take care of them of course, but a well worn book is a well loved book.
That's something I always apply to books and video games. I don't just want "a" copy, I want "mine". The one I played/read, because its important to me. This is the reason I don't understand why some folks sell a bunch of games and then buy them all again later.
After those last two paragraphs of tangential babbling, many of you will now think I'm crazy. That's fair.
So no, not just a video game thing, though you can see where my priorities lie.