ShiroiHikari (post: 1381245) wrote:Actually, the higher used prices at Gamestop makes it seem, at least to me, that they're trying to discourage used sales of very recent games-- perhaps at the behest of the industry?
ShiroiHikari (post: 1381266) wrote:So you're saying that if the industry puts a damper on used game sales, it will destroy game stores? Yeah, THAT'S a smart idea.
Nate (post: 1381273) wrote:Except getting rid of GameStop and Best Buy would literally DESTROY a lot of smaller studios. When I went to buy Dragon Quest V on the DS, guess who didn't have it? Wal-Mart or Best Buy. Guess who didn't carry Wild Arms: Alter Code F or Wild Arms V for the PS2? That would be Wal-Mart and Best Buy.
In the case for all three of these games, Gamestop was the ONLY store that carried them where I lived. Wal-Mart and Best Buy have much more limited shelf space than a store specifically for games. Wal-Mart and Best Buy pretty much only carry big name titles, anything that's smaller with a publisher that isn't well-known aren't going to get picked up, or at best they'll get one or two copies which could be gone quickly.
I know publishers don't see this. It's like you said, if GameStop went under, the companies wouldn't care, but a lot of fans would and a lot of small studios would see their profits fall (although in the case of DQV, Square-Enix isn't really a small studio, it's just DQ games are niche titles in America).
If they could create some embedded code that would make the game hard/impossible to upload or torrent then I'd be all with it
As much as I support Steam thoroughly, this. The Internet access requirement is a minor inconvenience, but I can deal. This though is the one thing I'd change. Heck, I'd even be fine if there was a penalty; you could return your games, but after a certain time period only for half price or something. With a credit card it'd be tricky, but they could have some kind of account credit system going.Nate (post: 1381420) wrote:If they'd just let people own the games they download, I'd support them completely.
Fish and Chips (post: 1381631) wrote: The Internet access requirement is a minor inconvenience, but I can deal. This though is the one thing I'd change..
Fish and Chips wrote:The Internet access requirement is a minor inconvenience
Nate (post: 1381420) wrote:And if they did it, I'd immediately stop supporting them as well. But I'm not going to complain about Sony for something they might maybe do one day in the future possibly we don't know. However I will complain about Steam for something they are doing right now and have been doing for a while.
And if you like Steam that's cool! Steam is honestly a really really good service, it's just I personally choose not to support it because I don't agree with the restrictions they place on consumers. I can admit outside of that one problem, they treat their customers really well and do a lot of cool things. If they'd just let people own the games they download, I'd support them completely.
Nate (post: 1381661) wrote:It is certainly not a minor inconvenience.
When my internet goes down because of a storm, and I lose my connection because my internet sucks, and I am COMPLETELY unable to play any of my games on my computer because I can't connect to the internet, this is not a minor inconvenience.
Or when a guy buys a game when he's stationed overseas, doesn't have an internet connection, and therefore can't play his game because he can't connect to the internet, meaning he just wasted his money on a game he literally can't play, this is not a minor inconvenience.
Or, a group of script kiddies decides to DDoS the servers so that their bandwidth is exceeded and people are unable to access them and therefore are prevented from playing a game. This is not a minor inconvenience.
Well really I―]The Dig[/QUOTE]Oh. That's right.Nate (post: 1381661) wrote:It is certainly not a minor inconvenience.
When my internet goes down because of a storm, and I lose my connection because my internet sucks, and I am COMPLETELY unable to play any of my games on my computer because I can't connect to the internet, this is not a minor inconvenience.
Or when a guy buys a game when he's stationed overseas, doesn't have an internet connection, and therefore can't play his game because he can't connect to the internet, meaning he just wasted his money on a game he literally can't play, this is not a minor inconvenience.
Or, a group of script kiddies decides to DDoS the servers so that their bandwidth is exceeded and people are unable to access them and therefore are prevented from playing a game. This is not a minor inconvenience.
blkmage (post: 1381664) wrote:My point wasn't that they might do it in the future, but that they might be doing it now without your knowledge. At least, that's what it seemed like with the leap year bug.
blkmage wrote:My point wasn't that they might do it in the future, but that they might be doing it now without your knowledge. At least, that's what it seemed like with the leap year bug.
What I'm trying to get at is that Valve at least has the courtesy to tell you upfront while Sony and Microsoft have historically been far less forthcoming about doing this sort of thing.
Unless there's something I'm missing about offline mode, isn't there that? Otherwise, my impression has been that it's an initial check, but a persistent connection isn't required.
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