This was, to some extent, my line of thinking on this issue...but I am starting to think that the risk of having digital goods tied to an account that may or may not eventually create ownership problems is not dramatically different than the idea that you run a risk that your physical games could be damaged in a flood/fire/etc, stolen in a break-in, develop bit rot or other physical problems, etc.Tanooki wrote: And then the classic one anyone has suffered in some form. You buy a game, you lose access to game, you just lost your money. Did your system die and it was account bound (cough Nintendo?) How about licensing slap fights where a game gets removed from the company storage so if you reinstall it's gone? How about accidentally (or not) violating some TOS or perceived so, and a company just erases your stuff in spite due to the rules...they just erased your money. There's lots of reasons which all tie back to owning something, then having it stolen out from under you for whatever reason because it's not a physical object.
With movies and music my big thing is sound fidelity: I can hear/see the difference between a Blu-Ray and a Netflix stream and hear the difference between a CD and an MP3. The question: do I care enough to hold on to the physical stuff? I am, for example, thinking it may be worth parting out my CD collection and reinvesting the money I get from it into a decent vinyl collection of favorite albums instead. I dunno.


