It might be true in the 90's, but what good are today's manuals? Last physical pc game I bought was Starcraft 2; the manual has 20 pages, most of them just basic retard instructions and the EULA... there's no glory to be found here.In the argument between physical and digital copies all I need to do to win is hold up the Fallout manual like Simba at the start of The Lion King.
Reminds me of the individual slips of paper in so many game cases with the CD key inside and nothing elseIt might be true in the 90's, but what good are today's manuals? Last physical pc game I bought was Starcraft 2; the manual has 20 pages, most of them just basic retard instructions and the EULA... there's no glory to be found here.In the argument between physical and digital copies all I need to do to win is hold up the Fallout manual like Simba at the start of The Lion King.
When I bought Fallout, I got a 2cd set with Fallout 1 and 2. It was in a cardboard--I'm loath to call it a case--wrapper that was just barely bigger than 2 jewel cases. It didn't come with any manuals
When I bought Fallout, I got a 2cd set with Fallout 1 and 2. It was in a cardboard--I'm loath to call it a case--wrapper that was just barely bigger than 2 jewel cases. It didn't come with any manuals
MessiahMan
The only thing, really? Torrents and thumbdrives don't auto-install and auto-update. You need to store them locally. They can be lost.
If those benefits aren't worth 5 bucks to you, that's okay, but don't deny that they exist.
Physical copies are overrated and a lot of the Codex's favorite developers from the 90s would have still been around today if digital distribution had showed up on the scene earlier than it did.
Torrents are naturally resilient.
If those benefits aren't worth 5 bucks to you, that's okay, but don't deny that they exist.
What would be a SS2 feelie? ShodanIf game developes still gave out "feelies" (sounds perverted lol) and had quality manuals, the case for physical copies might be stronger. Course, I only collect the good stuff
Actually you can now specify multiple Steam directories. Unless you mean storing your games in endless sub-folders such as categorizing by genre, but I think only aspies do that anyway.Auto-install? Installation for a steam game is clicking it and hitting next a few times. Installation for a normal game is clicking setup, finding the directory to put it in (not being able to categorize steam games in a directory structure pisses me off to no end), then hitting next a few times.
Folders? How quaint. A database with dynamic filters/smartlists/saved searches is the way to go.Unless you mean storing your games in endless sub-folders such as categorizing by genre, but I think only aspies do that anyway.
Actually you can now specify multiple Steam directories. Unless you mean storing your games in endless sub-folders such as categorizing by genre, but I think only aspies do that anyway.Auto-install? Installation for a steam game is clicking it and hitting next a few times. Installation for a normal game is clicking setup, finding the directory to put it in (not being able to categorize steam games in a directory structure pisses me off to no end), then hitting next a few times.
Can lose games? How? Torrents never go dead except for the oldest of old and unpopular games, which steam isn't carrying anyway. How about the potential doomsday when it turns out gabe newell killed a hooker and Valve gets sold off the EA/Activision? Online services are never 100% reliable, and when they fail they fail hard and for everyone at the same time. Torrents are naturally resilient.
Private trackers, bro.Can lose games? How? Torrents never go dead except for the oldest of old and unpopular games, which steam isn't carrying anyway. How about the potential doomsday when it turns out gabe newell killed a hooker and Valve gets sold off the EA/Activision? Online services are never 100% reliable, and when they fail they fail hard and for everyone at the same time. Torrents are naturally resilient.
Actually, I sometimes choose to buy something through Steam rather than torrents because Steam is much more reliable. If I leave a game downloading overnight on Steam I can rest assured it will be done when I wake up. With torrents and their wildly fluctuating seeds I often have to wait much longer because there are so many factors influencing the speed at which I can pull the files.
Also, torrents are naturally more resilient? Okay. Except that in the past I bought games on Steam after getting frustrated with supposedly well-seeded older torrents that run at 10 - 15kb/s for hours/days on end.
For every game I buy on Steam I still end up pirating three others, but I prefer Steam over torrents. The only download service I find that rivals Steam's reliability is news servers, and with those unless you pay a monthly fee for a premium server, most of the free servers only allow you to download nzbs that are under 30 days old. Also, with the recent DMCA takedowns chances are by the time you're halfway done with a download it might be taken down already.