There is an argument there that has been made many times before and will probably be made many times to come.newdarkcloud said:Even still, I feel that the consumer really should be entitled to the content on the disk that they legally purchased.Pyro Paul said:On Disk DLC are not as bad as you think...newdarkcloud said:I vented my opinions on this just a few days ago.
http://pressstarttodiscuss.blogspot.com/2012/04/15-dlc-how-it-is-being-handled-and-how.html
Most of the time it is acctually used as a mechanism to bypass certain restrictions or fees placed on digital delivery systems.
You see it happen a lot for games designed for Xbox LIVE which has so many restrictions on what you can and can't do on it from the publisher/developer stand point that many publishers/developers simply bypass this altogether posting a bulk of the DLC content on disk with only minor alterations provided by the DLC packet up for digital distribution.
Side-Note: I can't be the only one that finds these captcha ads slightly irritating.
what it ultimatly boils down to is that Digital Information isn't the same as Physical Property. As it stands now, with Digital information you are simply purchasing the 'right to observe'.