I agree if they figure a balanced aproach for digital consumer rights I be all for it. Oh and have the digitals be usable offline if they are on my hard drive be it pc, console, and handheld.Gearhead mk2 said:When digital rights actually give people rights, maybe. But even then, what about when you wanna sell it or trade it or borrow it or take it round a friends? And what about when your internet is down?
I think GOG does it better than Steam for the fact I can download the bought game say Witcher 2 download the whole thing to my usb go to my friends house or up north put it on the computer there and play it without needing a internet connection. Some things kinda get quirky mind you but I can say Steam does not allow that freedom at all (Steam requires online check before you can use offline game mode last I recall).BigTuk said:I have become a big fan of digital but I understand the caveat.. It means you're tied to a DRM platform like Steam or god forbid origin. . And even then you can have a case of the item being pulled from the provider's catalog which would mean it would likely disappear from your pc. On the flipside you can remove an drredownload as you need it so you don't have a ton of games cluttering your disk space.
On the other hand you have Gog which is sans DRM but not quite sure about the infinite downloads thing.
All in all I think Steam and GoG both have the best model for this . Especially for us international consumers . Be damned if any store in my country actually really stocks PC games ... and even when they do the mark up is ridiculous.
not to mention you can no longer lend games out to friends to try and same backwards they can no longer lend games to you.MajorTomServo said:I spent ~$120 on virtual console games over the years. One day, my wii died, and I lost all of them forever. Haven't bought a non-physical game since.
Physical games are usually cheaper too. There's sales, used copies, rentals... But with download only, there's usually a monopoly. PSN shop is still charging like $30 for Duke Nukem Forever...
Drive-Thru RPG has a ton of 2E books. I'm not sure it's comprehensive, but you might want to take a look.Aris Khandr said:Most of my books are 2nd Edition. Which, you know, isn't super in-demand, and thus relatively unlikely to be released in digital.
Have you checked out Green Man Gaming? They have a used and trade-in market (provided the games don't require, for example, a Steam Key to play).redmoretrout said:I would hate for games to go completely digital, only because that would stop me from buying/selling used games.