Kupek wrote:I'm starting to see that I don't own a physical object as a feature, not a bug. I don't like having stuff around. You have to find a place to put it, and take it with you when you move.
I broke up the response below into easily-skimmable, very short paragraphs for you to save you some time and allow you to blow by the stuff you don't wanna read.
And this is where sometimes I think people are a bit short-sighted, for lack of a better term. You don't wanna have stuff around? You're an anti-hoarder who likes to be as absolutely mobile as possible with the absolute minimum amount of "stuff" (or anything or anyone, really) anchoring you down? Fine, I can see that for a certain population that hasn't yet (and doesn't ever really want to) settle down. So take advantage of the multitude of other options having a physical disc over a digital download brings you, such as:
- selling the game outright for cash
- trading it for something else
- use Kijiji or other similar services to swap finished games with other people
Hell, if you only like to have at most 5 "active" games around at any time (even you have your Chrono Trigger as a keeper in the closet) and you pretty much just play through the games you get, you can even take advantage of the Trade 2 or Trade 3 deals at Best Buy or EB/Gamestop or the 50% additional credit or Gameplay Guarantee options at EB/Gamestop (or a combination thereof). For someone like you, I can't imagine you even wanting more than 5 current or active games available at any given time, so as long as you don't hold on to your game forever and a day, you can absolutely take advantage of this.
How the hell do you think I end up with basically every major release for every system? You think I can afford it with just my meager government salary, my wife on maternity leave, and having to pay for 3 mouths to feed (well, 2, the yougin' gets free food from mommy), a mortgage, and a car payment? You think I'd actually sacrifice my children's education fund to play a freakin' video game (we save a significant amount of money each month across many different funds, including education funds for the three kids)? No chance. I get it by paying $30 for that $70+tax game or just waiting for it used in 6 months (among many other legal scams). Options I wouldn't have if everything went digital download only.
So that's 4 additional options you can now use to stretch your gaming dollar. You can literally double the volume of titles you can enjoy.....and/or even get a return on your investment if you're "too busy". It's not uncommon for someone to buy Halo: Reach new for $60+tax and then within a week or two (it's a 10-12 hour campaign on Legendary for a decent player) get $50 cash for it (sometimes upwards of a month or more, like with Red Dead). With the 13% tax here, that means you paid about $20 for that game instead of $60. Hell, you could just rent it for a weekend for $7 and do the same thing. For someone who's been in school longer than any human being should, I figure stretching your budget as much as possible would be a major benefit. You lose any option to do anything like this if you only have digital download as a purchasing option.
So, unless the price is adjusted accordingly to account for the loss of options, you're quite literally just throwing your money in the garbage. Why not use that extra cash to either play more games (if you so desire), eat out a couple more times a month, buy that new pair of MMA spandex shorts you've been so ankerin' for, or, hell, blow it on impressing a woman you wanna lay? Not that you need it, my liege, but I'm just sayin' for us commoners..... :-)
I have yet to hear any possible logical argument (ie. not a "I just like it better" one) which could possibly place a digital download above a physical disc aside from availability. The clutter one is decent but is so easily avoided it falls apart under any real scrutiny. I haven't heard one yet from anyone here and every gamer I talk to in my city far prefers a physical disc for the reasons I mentioned. And please don't bring up the "time" argument. What we're talking about here is an hour or two a month, max. Often can even be done while you're doing "more important things". It's basically negligible.
And, obviously, we're talking about comparing the purchasing options of titles available in both formats, here.