And now for my 2nd wall of text...
Retronomy wrote:Incoming wall of text:
The biggest problems with digital download release platforms in terms of collecting/owning games isn't exactly the lack of a physical product.
Agreed.
-There is no guaranteeing that services like the steam platform will be around forever, or ever for the rest of our lives. In fact, logic dictates that it will not.
Agreed, which is why GoG appeals so much more to some people. Conversely, physical items have less durability than digital product in general (more later).
-In situations such as steam, you've be surprised how easy it is to lose an account. Don't believe me? Check out the hackforums market place.
People are careless, this does not mean it is easy to lose it.
-You are trusting another entity with your collection, which means said entity is capable of making your games inaccessible, whether purposeful or not. We've seen this recently with some Wii to Wii U transfers where people lost games. (Of course, in most cases Nintendo addressed the situation quite well.)
Agreed.
Conversely, owning the physical medium means
-Your games will last longer than you do if properly cared for.
Disagree. This is one main advantage of digital over physical!
-Theft is going to happen less often, as people aren't exactly able to steal your entire collection remotely.
-You are solely responsible for your games. If you are capable of taking care of your collection then there are no problems. However, accident prone people are going to be at a loss here.
Disagree. I think with proper precautions your collection is far more
safe "online" than in real life. You already mentioned theft (which I already think you are more exposed in physical items), but you don't seem to consider fires, floods and other ways you can easily lose part of your collection to the full extent. It is not just accident prone people. People can get insurances (and do).
Online there is little reason to get an insurance, particularly in GoG. In places like Steam games can not be moved out even if your account gets stolen, contacting the relevant authorities and proving your real identity will surely restore your access to your account.
Again a comparison between paper and online Magic: people at paper tournaments get decks stolen frequently. This never happens online. In cases where your account is hacked, in some known cases
Wizards of the Coast could reverse the (unauthorized) transfer of cards. People have rather large collections well worth stealing and it doesn't happen (particularly the online traders that have huge shops and make their livelihood out of buying and re-selling - they surely have thousands and thousands of dollars in inventory).
After this point, we get to the superficial benefits of physical collections.
-The Tactile Element - Being able to touch and hold your collection.
-The Visual Element - Regardless of TOS and perhaps DRM, there is nothing anyone can do about you owning original, physical copies of a game. It is YOURS, you can see the product, it is there. Even the recent trend of steam games that have physical distributions have this. You can display your collection how you see fit.
Tactile is one point online can not match. In terms of visual I think they have advantages - you can easily have things look visually appealing without "running out of shelf-space", you don't have stickers, damaged boxes, scratched discs, you don't need to get fingerprints on the boxes to look at them etc. This has some way to go still but in my opinion online can match and surpass physical here. Basically online has significant advantages in terms of storage.
On rumors of ps4 and the next xbox:
Although I'd be sad that the physical medium would be gone, I think the bigger concern is the longevity of these games.
Completely agree. I'm already worried about being able to get a 360, PS3 or Wii in the far-off future and not being able to play a great online-only game (perhaps Bubble Bobble Neo / Plus).
DLC (some of it is high quality) is even more of a lost cause. Some "expansions" will be quite scarce and inaccessible I think.
Ivo.