Betagam7 wrote:When the virtual console was first being mooted I remember thinking "well this seems like a good time to sell my SNES games and replace them with digital copies"
THIS WAS A GIGANTIC MISTAKE!
"Wow, I got £30 for a mint boxed complete copy of Zelda 3 with a sealed Sahasralas secrets book and map!There's no way this will shoot up to like 3 times the price now that the game is available digitally"
Wrong again!
Ultimately it's worth remembering that you always own a game. When you buy a digital release you own a license to play a game...a license that could be rescinded at any time and holds a resale value of nought.
Well what I think is worse is how hardcore the potential was utterly wasted here. I mean, I guess I was WAY too optimistic before the VC stuff launched for the Wii, but I was thinking "Wow maybe I'll get to play an official translated release of Seiken Densetsu 3 and own it!?", boy was I ever so wrong.
Don't get me wrong, when it comes to condensing things like this I'm a big fan. I've bought a lot of my SNES games over again on my Wii U simply for convenience and the ability to play them on an HDTV with nothing too fancy like a necessary upscaler whatever. But still, Nintendo has pretty much never capitalized on the potential here and has played it safe this entire time. Here's Mario 64, Super Mario Kart, Donkey Kong, etc games everyone probably already owns a few times over and can still be easily found. I think the original Wii had a grand total of like 10 N64 games for download, which is just utterly laughable.
I guess I'm contradicting myself a bit, but they really could have had my wallet buried in their pocket even deeper if the VC selection were a lot better and bigger.
Sony has a great lineup of PS1/PS2 titles on PSN though. But I don't really use it much since it's always been easy to keep playing discs on newer setups because the PS3 does PS1, and PS2 can at least do component or look decent through an HDMI adapter. But, at least they have a nice online library of the old stuff that's available.