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CM30today at 2:49 PM4 repliesview on HN

Well, if Nintendo and Microsoft go the same route (and sadly, I see that being almost inevitable at some point), that's probably the end of my interest in gaming as a whole. I generally refuse to 'rent' or 'license' things on a temporary basis, and have decided in this generation that every game I'll get for Switch 2 will be a physical game on cart version, without exception.

And the reasons for that are pretty simple. I like being able to resell games when done with them. I like being able to lend them to friends, or play them on as many consoles as I want. I like the idea of having something that companies (generally) can't remove due to licensing changes or an always online requirement.

This sort of change just feels like yet another step towards constantly renting rather than owning, or streaming games and media without any control over how or when you can use it.


Replies

criddelltoday at 4:26 PM

I'm guessing you know this already, but I thought it's worth saying - some Switch 2 carts only contain a game key and not the actual game.

https://en-americas-support.nintendo.com/app/answers/detail/...

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purpleflame1257today at 4:44 PM

GOG will let you download the offline installer for every game they sell, IIRC.

mywittynametoday at 5:36 PM

Counter-argument: I have a Steam account associated with a day 1 purchase of Half Life 2 (so, 25 years or so). Every game I've ever purchased is still available for me to download, while I lost probably 50% or more of my physical games collection.

If I'm renting those games, it sure seems like a good deal.

I do appreciate that console online market places have not historically been as well managed as Steam.

But also, GoG exists: you can buy a PC game and get a DRM-free download that you can play offline and store forever.

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gonzalohmtoday at 4:53 PM

What about PC gaming? There are stores that sell you the game and it's yours to keep

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