Author Topic: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:  (Read 1804299 times)

turf

PRO Supporter

Re: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:
« Reply #16500 on: November 11, 2024, 10:18:52 pm »
Been cruising around the site a lot for the last couple of days.
Thank y’all for keeping it going.


I necrothreaded a bunch of old posts I'd never commented on before a couple months ago in a attempt to stir up some conversation. This site is feeling more and more lonely with each passing year...

It does.
Facebook groups and things like that add to the inactivity on the site.

Do we have a Facebook group?


tripredacus

Re: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:
« Reply #16501 on: December 09, 2024, 10:43:12 am »
General gaming updates

- I had in recent months decided to put my PS3 on the upstairs TV and was originally planning to use an HDMI audio breakout for it. I had previously used that same breakout to test a Roku so I know it worked fine. I then had happened upon a used AVR at thrift for like $15 or something that not only had HDMI inputs but also supported upscaling. It was a no brainer to use that. After I had replaced the PS3 controller I had done a test and tried GTA V and everything seemed OK. So last night I had Batman Arkham City come up in my backlog and gave that a whirl. But I find out that I can't actually play it yet because I am missing sounds. I only have 2 speakers connected to the AVR and this particular one doesn't seem to have an option (nor the PS3) to force stereo. If I disable the subwoofer, then the fronts get disabled. When I play playing I couldn't hear Bruce Wayne speaking so I'm guessing all of his audio (and probably other sounds) were being sent to the center channel. So now I will have to find 3 speakers for that and put up some small shelves to put the speakers on. I also do not know where I would but a center channel quite yet. I don't want to use the PS3 on my downstairs TV because I am out of outlets there and can't really move anything away from that. The only way I could free up an outlet would be to run physical cabled surround rears and not use the wireless kit, or not use the turntable or something else like that.

- I have some older PC games coming up on the backlog and have a few issues with my computers. My Windows 98 computer the ODD doesn't read in Windows. I still have to put in the time to figure out why that is not working. I have the extra drives to test and made the boot disk to let me test the drives in DOS. I'm fairly certain that this is a Windows problem as USB CD drives do not work either. My Windows 95 computer was good to go but last time I turned it on the video driver stopped working. That computer had the repaired Voodoo 3 card in it so I hope that the card hasn't gone bad. If so I have another AGP card I can use but now I have to find where I put the driver CD. So I will be spending my gaming time on fixing computers for awhile, which I might just end up streaming because I have that ability now.

turf

PRO Supporter

Re: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:
« Reply #16502 on: December 25, 2024, 09:06:13 pm »
Merry Christmas, VGCollect!
Hope it was filled with games and gizmos! 


Re: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:
« Reply #16503 on: December 25, 2024, 11:01:12 pm »
Merry Christmas, VGCollect!
Hope it was filled with games and gizmos!


Merry Christmas! Not as many games for me this years, but there were gaming gifts no less. It just isn't Christmas unless I get at least a few games :p

Warmsignal

Re: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:
« Reply #16504 on: January 09, 2025, 11:29:34 pm »
Well, yet another GameStop in my town has shut it doors. Leaving only one left. I know how much the company is hated by people for various reasons, but I've always had pleasant experiences and have a lot of fondness for the glory days of game collecting at their stores.

It hits the feels with closings like this, I've been going this location literally since they opened their doors in 2008. I remember just stumbling on this location right when it first opened, and being enthralled with all the stuff they had, back when I was just starting to collect. We never really had independent stores in our area, so physical media was reaching it's peak and suddenly there were several GameStop stores in my town. This was the only one built from the ground up as a GameStop. I started to hit all of their locations on a weekly basis, and did so for many years. They've all been going sharply downhill since the pandemic, but I drove by this same location this evening to find it had just been shuttered. Just a real bummer and depressing reminder of how all good things come to pass, being there from the excitement of the beginning, to the bitter end.

As if there were any silver lining to it, I did manage to snag the actual GameStop logo marquees that were on the outside of the building (the light up signs), from going to the dump. They're absolutely huge and there's nothing I can do with them, but it just felt like something I needed to do as a homage to a store that meant a lot to me over the years. I'll probably let them go to someone who wants them eventually, but I couldn't let them go to the landfill. GameStop love them or hate them, are a piece of gaming history just as Funcoland was, and one day I think more people will recognize that.

The times, they are a changing, and I simply hate it. The end of game stores, the end of physical games. It's just no fun this way.

Re: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:
« Reply #16505 on: January 10, 2025, 04:26:21 pm »
Well, yet another GameStop in my town has shut it doors. Leaving only one left. I know how much the company is hated by people for various reasons, but I've always had pleasant experiences and have a lot of fondness for the glory days of game collecting at their stores.

It hits the feels with closings like this, I've been going this location literally since they opened their doors in 2008. I remember just stumbling on this location right when it first opened, and being enthralled with all the stuff they had, back when I was just starting to collect. We never really had independent stores in our area, so physical media was reaching it's peak and suddenly there were several GameStop stores in my town. This was the only one built from the ground up as a GameStop. I started to hit all of their locations on a weekly basis, and did so for many years. They've all been going sharply downhill since the pandemic, but I drove by this same location this evening to find it had just been shuttered. Just a real bummer and depressing reminder of how all good things come to pass, being there from the excitement of the beginning, to the bitter end.

As if there were any silver lining to it, I did manage to snag the actual GameStop logo marquees that were on the outside of the building (the light up signs), from going to the dump. They're absolutely huge and there's nothing I can do with them, but it just felt like something I needed to do as a homage to a store that meant a lot to me over the years. I'll probably let them go to someone who wants them eventually, but I couldn't let them go to the landfill. GameStop love them or hate them, are a piece of gaming history just as Funcoland was, and one day I think more people will recognize that.

The times, they are a changing, and I simply hate it. The end of game stores, the end of physical games. It's just no fun this way.

This hit me hard to read because it brought me back to where I was. Middle school 2010 when I watched game crazy shut down for good. All the memories going in there with my dad to get the double whammy. He'd get a dvd from hollywood video while id browse the new PS2 Madden and need for speed. My childhood encapsulated.  The MVP stickers. The purple and green ones  :'(    I remember crying in front of my mom. It hit me at once.  If I had to pick a time. My youth became adulthood. It was that day.  I miss the 5 dollar resurfacing.  I miss the atmosphere behind gaming. And gamestop is the last chain.


Even gamestop. Christmas of 08. Getting Mario Party for DS. My first midnight launch. My first trade in. The atmosphere of it. Walking with my friend 6 miles to get naughty bear because it was a T teen game.


I know people take really radical stances with gamestop. But they were always a loyal and straight up place to me. All I see is people saying "they scammed me" with trade ins. I mean how? You literally get shown the total BEFORE you sign your name waiving your games ownership away. Thet actually paid more fairly for my ps portal than local people were. The company has overhead and wages. Sure they maybe prioritize profits a bit. Ruin stock. But that's busienss. local gamestop going defunct is a scary idea to me. And they are far from what id consider scummy. Are they as cheap or fair on offers as say a ebay listing? Not usually.  But neither is Walmart, Amazon and even flea markets now a days.  Gamestop has a stellar return policy, a wonderful niche little boutique that brings you to socialize with other gamers. And above all. They are a quality swag shop. Physical LE pre orders. The pro rewards are actually pretty neat.  As of late they have become a shell of themselves.  And especially online purchases from them seem to be predatory.  But thats not how I remember or feel about the brand. I know its a dog in its silver beard years laying on the porch all day. 


We are entering the age of no more midnight release parties.  Renting a game for the weekend to play with a big pizza and some mountain dew.  That already died a decade ago.  We are leaving the stratosphere Warmsignal.  And going to a place we may not quite want to go. And like you said. Its gonna be sad.  A place of digital. No brick and mortar. No more "hey can I borrow that before you return it" no more black friday. Now its black month. The days of pizza and mountain dew with Oni for ps2. Chatting the gamestop dude for 10 minutes about console wars.  Gaming has gone the way of movies after blockbuster died. Its all lost the familial energy of good ol gaming. It got so fancy but we lost a smidge along the way. 

And as a testament to what you said. I believe your assumption is correct that people will miss it when its gone. I was alive for blockbusters closing. Nobody gave a hoot about blockbuster until it was the "last blockbuster"  they were also the expensive novelty shop, with predatory hidden fees and a dying business model. Everyone local said to me blockbuster was trash and netflix was the new wave. Redbox was better. And they were correct. But truth be told they all dumped on BB until they were nostalgic and missed. Same with toys r us.  KB toys. K Mart was a joke.  Until walmart won. Now everyone misses K Mart. Gamestop is a place that love or hate. Has done a lot for used gaming, and provided people at least some memories. Gonna be missed. I've gotten as many decent deals as had trades.


I am happy you got the sign at least. May someone get it who will cherish it. Godspeed Gamestop! Good luck finding a loving home for it :)
« Last Edit: January 10, 2025, 04:33:14 pm by marvelvscapcom2 »



Re: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:
« Reply #16506 on: January 14, 2025, 01:35:44 am »
Well, yet another GameStop in my town has shut it doors. Leaving only one left. I know how much the company is hated by people for various reasons, but I've always had pleasant experiences and have a lot of fondness for the glory days of game collecting at their stores.

It hits the feels with closings like this, I've been going this location literally since they opened their doors in 2008. I remember just stumbling on this location right when it first opened, and being enthralled with all the stuff they had, back when I was just starting to collect. We never really had independent stores in our area, so physical media was reaching it's peak and suddenly there were several GameStop stores in my town. This was the only one built from the ground up as a GameStop. I started to hit all of their locations on a weekly basis, and did so for many years. They've all been going sharply downhill since the pandemic, but I drove by this same location this evening to find it had just been shuttered. Just a real bummer and depressing reminder of how all good things come to pass, being there from the excitement of the beginning, to the bitter end.

As if there were any silver lining to it, I did manage to snag the actual GameStop logo marquees that were on the outside of the building (the light up signs), from going to the dump. They're absolutely huge and there's nothing I can do with them, but it just felt like something I needed to do as a homage to a store that meant a lot to me over the years. I'll probably let them go to someone who wants them eventually, but I couldn't let them go to the landfill. GameStop love them or hate them, are a piece of gaming history just as Funcoland was, and one day I think more people will recognize that.

The times, they are a changing, and I simply hate it. The end of game stores, the end of physical games. It's just no fun this way.


I don't have much love for Gamestop, but I don't wish for them to go out of business completely or more so for physical media to go away. I've had both good and bad experiences at the various Gamestops I've been to over the years. Currently, there are two game stores in the small town I now live in. One is a Gamestop and the other is an independent store. Sadly, I'd go with Gamestop in a heartbeat given how overpriced the independent store is. Unfortunately, this is my opinion of most independent game stores these days. I get they have to charge more for their games to stay in business, but most have pretty much given up any pretense of not trying to overcharge their customers and it's now the standard to essentially charge high ebay at minimum. Just a few years ago (pre-covid), there were way more quality, reasonably priced game stores I adored visiting weekly, but they've all since closed down. Gamestop became one of the last brick and mortar game stores that I mostly enjoyed going to, especially after moving away from a more urban area in 2022.


What saddens me the most is the demise of physical media. I prefer physical ownership when it comes to all types of media, but video games are the format I'm most adamant about actually owning physical copies. I know we've all discussed it to death on here in various threads, but I've already pulled back heavily on buying new releases since outside the Switch, I'm more or less buying a CD key when I purchase new PS5 games. The same is true of Series X/S games too, even last gen consoles too to some extent. Realizing that a large portion of my physical PS4 and PS5 collection might be unplayable in a few years has really made me a lot of picky about what I choose to buy and when I choose to buy it. It honestly sucks since some games I really wanted day one, and just a few years ago I would have been bought them right away, but with most titles I simply cannot justify it anymore. With a combination of various other factors, the future of gaming looks very, very grim to me and it's been a challenge to come to terms with. I mostly play retro games only now, or at least games that are several years old since most modern games don't appeal to me, or I'm simply not willing to pay what the publisher is charging either physically or digitally.


All this has made me feel old before my time. Memories of midnight releases of highly anticipated games now feels like something I did a lifetime ago, or the fact that I remember a time when DLC, season passes, DRM, and day one 15GB patches didn't exist. I was playing Dead or Alive 4 quite a bit this evening after work, and that game feel ancient now in its aesthetic, lack of DLC or patches, and just that it's a a straight up, no BS gaming experience on an actual disk. And it's an XBOX 360 game no less. I haven't liked where gaming has been heading for a long time, but it's nearly hit a point where I just can't anymore with it. Gamestop's demise is just another sign of this era going away for good until someday no remnant of it will remain. I don't mean to sound so grim, but it's hard to feel any other way about it.

dhaabi

Re: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:
« Reply #16507 on: January 14, 2025, 09:35:47 am »
What saddens me the most is the demise of physical media. I prefer physical ownership when it comes to all types of media, but video games are the format I'm most adamant about actually owning physical copies. I know we've all discussed it to death on here in various threads, but I've already pulled back heavily on buying new releases since outside the Switch, I'm more or less buying a CD key when I purchase new PS5 games. The same is true of Series X/S games too, even last gen consoles too to some extent. Realizing that a large portion of my physical PS4 and PS5 collection might be unplayable in a few years has really made me a lot of picky about what I choose to buy and when I choose to buy it.

It's been posted several times in various topics, but I'll mention it once more: https://www.doesitplay.org/

After going through the first page of your PlayStation 4 collection (you mention having purchased PlayStation 5 games, but zero are added to your collection), these are the findings DoesItPlay? reports:
Can Play: 16
Can't Play: 1
Not Reported: 8

It comes as no surprise to me, but the single instance of a game being unplayable before being updated is Assassin's Creed Odyssey, which is a large, open-world game from Ubisoft who are notorious for lack of quality control.

I'll also mention that not all of the sixteen games reported to be playable without an internet connection are the same regional release as what you own. The two regional releases may have varying builds, but it seems more positively favored that both physical items play fine without internet updates.
« Last Edit: January 14, 2025, 10:26:32 am by dhaabi »

Warmsignal

Re: VGC's Anonymous/"General" Topic:
« Reply #16508 on: January 14, 2025, 01:40:12 pm »
I too agree that the condemnation of current day disc-based games is a little overblown, but it's not hard to understand where the sentiment comes from. Many game companies are fine allowing their customers to do the quality control check in the official release window after pressing it to a disc, which is total BS and sometimes completely tanks the reputation of a new game. Games get released when they aren't sufficiently bug tested or in some cases not completed, and that's become way too normalized. Such an idiotic practice, can you imagine any other industry being so boldly anti-consumer?

What strikes me is that they still put forth the effort to print physical copies of games, but they've been almost completely pushed out of physical retail. Target and Walmart are slowly, but surely fazing out the last dozen or so shelf spaces they still have reserved for games. The GameStop stores I've been to of late have almost nothing in terms of games on their shelves, they intentionally de-emphasized physical games to the point it was difficult to find and even pre-order a lot of releases, which makes no sense for a niche video game store to do. As a result, there's never anyone shopping the games in their stores, and it's a total ghost-town most of the time when I would go. GameStop did this to themselves, as much or more than the industry changes did this to them. Their entire store model was always built off of circulating copies of games into the local markets, and buying and reselling the used ones. They've abandon that. I don't believe any recent leadership at the company has any real strategy for survival, they're just there to bleed the company of any value it has left to line their own pockets and then resign. This is what typically happens to a failing retail establishment.

But I understand bikingjahuty's doomer-ism, we are reaching a point where everything that we as millennials loved about the gaming experience in our younger years, is all but obsolete. We've sacrificed so much reliability and piece of mind, in the pursuit of technological progress. The account-based digital landscape has only atomized the gaming experience for many players, local multi-player has been de-emphasized in favor of online gameplay. Folks don't even care to own the games anymore, if they can get a sub which allows them to play new releases for a limited time. We're told that ownership of software is going away in the near future, that maybe consoles themselves are going away, and it's just going to be an online subscription to PlayStation or Xbox.

I won't want any part of it, by the time gaming reaches that point. I don't think we're there yet, but the pillars are falling. Game stores are giving up, shutting down, the average consumer has made the switch to the digital marketplace. I agree with biking that gaming in the current era, almost does not resemble gaming even 10 years ago in terms of quality, selection, security of purchases, any sort of hobby aspect we enjoyed. It's become so transformed in favor of big business over the consumer, which is always the story you'd expect in our late-stage economic system. It's designed to do this as a feature, not a bug. Technology is only the accomplice helping to accelerate the enshittification of all things, and the concentration of wealth and power into the hands of the few. As long as we the end users can be convinced that it's being made more "convenient", it's enough that most will abide.

I'd say the best days of gaming are in the rear view. The gaming industry is flirting with apocalypse, and in a lot of ways deserves it.