Hello everyone
I have been browsing for a little while now and one thing I always see come up in discussions with retro game lovers are the nostalgic old stories people love to share of how when they were a kid they'd go to their local blockbuster or other rental service place and rent the latest and greatest NES or SNES games and run home to try them, the fresh grey plastic smell and the blockbuster cases that have become immortalized in our memories and hearts forever
. it'd be a weekend memory for them growing up to get a new game to try and beat
. They'd grab some candy from the local store and invite friends and try different games out and only the most beloved ones would get bought if they enjoyed them a lot and didn't want to give them back
It was a ritual of sorts and almost imbeded into their childhood fun. I remember having amazing memories like this with Hollywood video as a kid because that was the one closest to my house. But it seems like the magic never did return. And by the time I became a teenager, they were all but dead.
This was such a huge staple in gaming that almost everyone has a fond memory of Blockbuster or Hollywood video and renting out a game and either hating it to the point of a funny memory or loving it so that it became instilled in their life and soul.
And I don't see why it wouldn't work in the modern era. I wish I could go to the blockbuster right now and rent Dragon Ball Fighter Z or another game I want to try. It would be beautiful if they could reopen. I dream and long for game crazy to come back. I remember actually crying the day they closed.
But as time went on, renting games sort of died slow with the way of the evolution of gaming. With no real sign of why. It led to both blockbuster and hollywood video going under and nobody ever rents games ever since maybe the PS2 era on I started noticing the decline and certainly once the PS3 era came it was almost non existant. You'd never hear "Oh I rented God of War III, I gotta return it" It was always pre orders and buying it out right and digital copies.
Why do you think this sudden collapse occurred? It seems like it was so sudden and so random that the rental companies began to tank. Was this a perpetration by gamestop or some other big corperate entity like Microsoft and Sony themselves? Or was it more just people becoming more technology driven and steering away from physical media?
A lot of people say renting games became less popular because blockbuster went under, but blockbuster went under because renting games became less popular. It happened before which led to the closings not vice versa. And renting games still have Gamefly and Redbox and such as avenues into renting the newest games but nobody seems to do it anymore and those who do are certainly a minority.
I kinda question myself as to why I have never tried gamefly or redbox for games. Neither have most of my friends or family. It seems like such a convenient way to beat games you want to beat but not have to keep them or pay full price for them.
I wonder if a diversion tactic is at play. But that's another discussion for another day.
Why do you think renting games became less popular. And if you were one of the kids who rented from blockbuster, how come you didn't continue into the modern era (if you stopped).
Thanks for reading and sharing.
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R.I.P Blockbuster