Pre-ordering video games used to mean securing your disc at a retailer before they sold out on launch night. Now it means paying full price (or more) for a p...
Honestly, if the idea of no trials don’t bother you, there are plenty more reminders why YOU shouldn’t preorder.
As for the idea that physical games are protecting you: They really aren’t. Even in the 00s, the 1.0/Gold that was on the disc needed a LOT of patches to even be playable, let alone what you remember (remember the debacle that was Tribes 2?). And that has only gotten worse. Hell, the Souls youtubers regularly will do a “And let’s look at what was in 1.0 to decipher some lore” videos.
And that also ignores that console hardware fails. We are basically at the point where speedrunners and “purists” will knife each other over working NES parts (maybe also SNES?) because of failures. Let alone bit rot on discs, failing batteries on cartridges, etc. And PC wise? There is a reason GoG got popular as “We figured out how to play those older games on a modern version of Windows”. My favorite example is still Warhammer 40k Chaos Gate (the old one) where, if memory serves, it worked in 9x, failed in 2k and vista, worked in 7, and I stopped caring about even trying anymore by 8.
And that isn’t even getting into online services and DLC. And for people who think DLC was an invention of the 00s/10s: When I was a whee lad, I mowed every fricking lawn in the neighborhood to make enough money to send some random dude a check so I could get access to his FTP server to download the secret missions pack (?) for Star Crusader.
If you like physical games: Cool. But that has nothing to do with game preservation and, arguably, never has. That is just the excuse people use to justify having midlife crises and buying games of their childhood (I say as I glance over at my shelf of every single Armored Core game…). And these days it is mostly a way to get some FOMO sales (although LRG are getting me a Tomba re-release so I am cool with all their e-waste now. Fuck the planet if it means more people will experience the weird that was Tomba).
Games preservation has always been: Re-releases and emulation (software or, increasingly, hardware). Which, ironically, is easier with digital since you can more easily pull a snapshot.
GoG is nice and I am a big supporter.
As for the idea that physical games are protecting you: They really aren’t. Even in the 00s, the 1.0/Gold that was on the disc needed a LOT of patches to even be playable, let alone what you remember (remember the debacle that was Tribes 2?). And that has only gotten worse. Hell, the Souls youtubers regularly will do a “And let’s look at what was in 1.0 to decipher some lore” videos.
And that also ignores that console hardware fails. We are basically at the point where speedrunners and “purists” will knife each other over working NES parts (maybe also SNES?) because of failures. Let alone bit rot on discs, failing batteries on cartridges, etc. And PC wise? There is a reason GoG got popular as “We figured out how to play those older games on a modern version of Windows”. My favorite example is still Warhammer 40k Chaos Gate (the old one) where, if memory serves, it worked in 9x, failed in 2k and vista, worked in 7, and I stopped caring about even trying anymore by 8.
And that isn’t even getting into online services and DLC. And for people who think DLC was an invention of the 00s/10s: When I was a whee lad, I mowed every fricking lawn in the neighborhood to make enough money to send some random dude a check so I could get access to his FTP server to download the secret missions pack (?) for Star Crusader.
If you like physical games: Cool. But that has nothing to do with game preservation and, arguably, never has. That is just the excuse people use to justify having midlife crises and buying games of their childhood (I say as I glance over at my shelf of every single Armored Core game…). And these days it is mostly a way to get some FOMO sales (although LRG are getting me a Tomba re-release so I am cool with all their e-waste now. Fuck the planet if it means more people will experience the weird that was Tomba).
Games preservation has always been: Re-releases and emulation (software or, increasingly, hardware). Which, ironically, is easier with digital since you can more easily pull a snapshot.