Author Topic: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?  (Read 4257 times)

What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« on: January 21, 2024, 09:56:07 pm »
This topic has come up numerous times recently in various Facebook groups I belong to as well as in a livestream I was watching this evening. Being a collecting site, I figure most VGcollect people are not happy about the inevitable digital only future of modern gaming, but I thought it would be interesting to see what everyone's feelings are towards this topic, and how, if at all, will this change the way you purchase and play modern games?

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #1 on: January 21, 2024, 10:16:45 pm »
Even though I've taken a big step back from collecting for the past few years, I'm still a huge proponent of physical games and actual ownership of the games you purchase. Currently, I only buy digital games when they are on sale for dirt cheap (Steam Summer Sale, GOG Holidat sale, ect). I rarely have ever spent over $10 on any digital game or DLC since my trade off for the lack of real ownership is investing as little as possible into the game I bought. Luckily up until now I've had the luxury of physically owning most of the games I have a desire to play. I have to thank places like Limited Run Games or Special Reserve Games for enabling me to do this with smaller, more niche releases, but also even AAA games.


Before I get into what I plan on doing once all modern gaming goes digital only, I do want to address the issue of many modern physical games, particularly on the PS5 and Series X/S, being little more than beefed up CD keys. I say this because the discs are definitely more than CD keys, however without downloading the rest of the game which 90% of them require, the game will either not work at all or be in an unplayable state. I've seen this with various PS4 games as well, although it is less egregious than on consoles from the current gen. What this essentially means is the longevity of collecting for the PS5, Series X/S, and even PS4 and XBONE is severely in question. I'm hedging on Sony and Microsoft not keeping the servers for their older platforms up forever and someday making all those necessary downloads and patches unavailable, more or less turning your modern console collections into paperweights inside a blueray case. I've taken a step back from accumulating any sort of substantial PS5 collection as a result, and have even started swapping out my PS4 copies of certain games for their Switch equivalent assuming the game isn't substantially compromised due to being on less powerful hardware.


But with that out of the way, once the pretense of physical ownership and distribution is completely gone, I am mostly going to abandon modern gaming. I say "mostly" because I do plan on buying some games digitally, but only when they've gone on sale substantially. I'm also unlikely to buy any new consoles from Sony or Microsoft, especially Microsoft since their XBOX and PC library of titles is nearly identical now. I feel like the only question mark towards everything going digitial next gen is what the successor to the Nintendo Switch will do. While I do think there is a possibility it may continue to use physical media, I think the odds of it adopting some sort of Gamepass SAAS model is far more likely. I know Nintendo likes to try and innovate, and I can see them offering a cloud based gaming service that allows you to play their games on essentially any platform, but of course they'll offer their own hardware to play it on and offer some sort of benefits and exclusivity for using it. I guess we'll see, but I'm barely any less bleak over what's in store for Nintendo. But I will still go on only spending <$10 on digital games, and on very rare occasions I may spend around $20, but only if it's a game I really, really want to play. Without being able to own my games, the desire to purchase them at all is significantly diminished for me.


Luckily I still have a crazy amount of retro games I can play, but there's something very somber about not being able to get excited about modern gaming. I've been gaming for nearly my whole life and assuming I live to be in my 70s or 80s, I'll have to live the last half of my life as someone who doesn't really care about new, hot releases. Given, gaming might look significantly different in 10 to 20 years than it does now, where the idea of sitting at your computer or in front of a TV and playing games, might seem outdated and antiquated, when some sort of Neurolink device allows you to think you're actually inside of a game (think of the Matrix), but even that sounds fairly scary and unappealing to me if I'm being honest. I guess we'll see what happens next gen, but for the most part I am mostly bowing out of modern gaming once next gen's consoles start coming out.

telekill

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #2 on: January 21, 2024, 11:34:06 pm »
Assuming I'm still alive in five years, I'm planning to walk away from modern gaming when it goes digital only. I'm already not impressed with a majority of what the industry is pumping out anyway. I expect it's quite possible the digital only future will happen with the next generation. Luckily, I have 40 years of gaming that I know I've enjoyed and can revisit.

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #3 on: January 21, 2024, 11:39:48 pm »
I wonder if digital prices being dirt cheap would continue or if that being the only option the prices may not drop as much.

I still prefer physical somewhat but I'm not buying nearly as many games as I used to. When you can often find digital games complete with all their DLC for under $10 its hard to justify picking the physical version over it. I'd rather have all the content than buy the physical version. Physical "complete" editions are rarer now than they were early in the PS4 gen.

For your point about Nintendo, I gotta disagree completely. That doesn't sound like Nintendo at all. Their games actually sell, they aren't going to put them on a subscription service anytime soon. Nintendo's also notoriously terrible when it comes to online infrastructure. Nintendo wouldn't want their games on another platform. They make a bunch of money on Switch's hardware sales success where Xbox and PlayStation's margins are slimmer with hardware alone. Xbox series X|S are sold at a loss costing them as much as $200 per sale. PS5 doesn't sell at a loss but they don't profit as much from hardware as Nintendo does.

Warmsignal

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #4 on: January 22, 2024, 01:21:33 am »
I don't really think it's gonna happen, in the sense that there's absolutely zero physical games. So it becomes a niche market, but it's not the end. They still print books, they still make CDs, DVDs, there's a vinyl boom still happening in 2024. I can only foresee the biggest of greediest corporations going scorched Earth on physical, and ultimately trying (as Ubisoft and others would clearly prefer) moving to a purely subscription based "you own nothing" model, not even a download. But to Hell with them, I don't really care.

I know there will always be publishers of physical media, even if it's niche and limited. I'll probably continue to buy those sorts of products. I have Steam, so if I absolutely need to experience a release or two per year, I might make a purchase on there. I certainly don't collect downloads, and never will.

Simple as that, really.

I've seen no reason to believe the figure of physical PS5 games which require an Internet connection would be anywhere near 90%. Perhaps when your PS5 is connected to Internet, 90% of your games will download instead of installing, but I'm more inclined to believe 90%of PS5 games don't require it for one reason or another to be playable. I think there's a misconception that all physical games today come with the equivalent of Cyberpunk 2077 quality assurance for the version that's on the disc, but I don't think that's true either (in fact, there's a new and improved edition of Cyberpunk on PS5 that just got a physical release). And again, you can always let your games download and store the latest revisions on an external hard-drive, as another means of preserving them.

An interesting watch on modern game preservation - https://youtu.be/E40lcitQoAs?si=gz1S8jjoE0bTC7Xp&t=246

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #5 on: January 22, 2024, 02:34:24 am »
That Ubisoft quote about being comfortable about not owning games is not as harsh with the full context.

The full interview: https://www.gamesindustry.biz/the-new-ubisoft-and-getting-gamers-comfortable-with-not-owning-their-games

Quote
"The point is not to force users to go down one route or another," he explains. "We offer purchase, we offer subscription, and it's the gamer's preference that is important here. We are seeing some people who buy choosing to subscribe now, but it all works."


Quote is literally from the same interview. The interviewer then asks him "what is it going to take for subscription to step up and become a more significant proportion of the industry?" So he gave a full reasonable answer to which one sentence was plastered everywhere. He's even sympathetic in the rest of the quote relating it to the ownership of DVDs.

Quote
"One of the things we saw is that gamers are used to, a little bit like DVD, having and owning their games. That's the consumer shift that needs to happen. They got comfortable not owning their CD collection or DVD collection. That's a transformation that's been a bit slower to happen [in games]. As gamers grow comfortable in that aspect… you don't lose your progress. If you resume your game at another time, your progress file is still there. That's not been deleted. You don't lose what you've built in the game or your engagement with the game. So it's about feeling comfortable with not owning your game.

"I still have two boxes of DVDs. I definitely understand the gamers perspective with that. But as people embrace that model, they will see that these games will exist, the service will continue, and you'll be able to access them when you feel like. That's reassuring.

So clearly, in the full context, he's not saying it needs to happen he's answering the question of what it would take for it to happen.


Separately, there's also this interview quote from October 2023 from Ubisoft's SVP of Business Development, Chris Early:

https://news.ubisoft.com/en-us/article/wy4gKUmOdRRoO5Uvlr8CA

Quote
There’s a collector edition market. There’s the aspect of gifting physical items and allowing access for people to be able to easily purchase a game in a store and gift them to their friends or family. Some people will always want to own a physical disc. I just don’t think it’s going away. Do I think physical sales might get lower over time? Sure, but will it ever completely go away? I don’t think so.


Ubisoft does not deserve most of the hate they get. If you hate Ubisoft for making online focused games, the same franchises over and over, microtransactions, whatever then why not support Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown? First non-mobile Prince of Persia game in 14 years, many 9/10 reviews, $50 launch price, free demo across all platforms.. if this is the direction people want from Ubisoft it's out now ready to be bought and owned physically or digitally.
« Last Edit: January 22, 2024, 08:44:14 am by weirdfeline »

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #6 on: January 22, 2024, 03:36:07 am »
I pick up both digital and and physical releases already, so not a lot will change.  For me, I'd be less inclined to pick up certain games right away, like a lot of stuff I grab on console tend to be singleplayer game experiences I'm not as likely to replay, mostly PS5, so like God of War, Last of Us, Spider-Man, and then I beat them and trade them in to pay for another game.  Not that I don't like the games, they were good, I'm just not as likely to replay them and don't really need to keep them.  So instead, for stuff like that in a digital only landscape, they'd turn into waiting on a sale, or being something I play only on a Game Pass type service.  There are absolutely games I'd rather own physically, Nintendo will probably be doing it for a long while still no matter what and would likely be the last bastions of it.

Physical products don't mean much to games I want to play, I'll play them no matter what as great new games are coming out all the time, I'd probably just play a little less and focus on the ones I really want as it's not like I'm ever short on something to play.

dhaabi

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #7 on: January 22, 2024, 11:27:59 am »
I've begun thinking that an all-digital future won't happen. At least, not until worldwide internet infrastructure becomes more widely available with higher quality. Below is a comment I've made elsewhere:

People also overlook many other areas of the world such as parts of Europe, Africa, and Asia in addition to rural North America, even. I doubt we'll truly see a digital-only console anytime soon, because regions like these won't be able to support a digital-only system. If decisions like to make certain games digital-only is to come, then they'll just be missing out on sales while certainly not gaining any more.

Of course, this issue could just be ignored with companies deciding to cut their losses in some markets, but I don't think that will happen anytime soon. I've not seen anyone else make this sort of argument, so perhaps that is only wishful thinking.

Quote
"One of the things we saw is that gamers are used to, a little bit like DVD, having and owning their games. That's the consumer shift that needs to happen. They got comfortable not owning their CD collection or DVD collection. That's a transformation that's been a bit slower to happen [in games]. As gamers grow comfortable in that aspect… you don't lose your progress. If you resume your game at another time, your progress file is still there. That's not been deleted. You don't lose what you've built in the game or your engagement with the game. So it's about feeling comfortable with not owning your game.

"I still have two boxes of DVDs. I definitely understand the gamers perspective with that. But as people embrace that model, they will see that these games will exist, the service will continue, and you'll be able to access them when you feel like. That's reassuring.

Like the person being interviewed mentions, the majority of people have grown comfortable with subscription-based models for music, movies, and TV. However, that's not to say they enjoy it, as there are so many issues with how it's being managed now, with licenses being sold regularly from party to party. A recent video from videogamedunkey pokes fun at this ridiculousness in a way which only strengthens the argument.

That said, I'm now envisioning a future which has games being treated the same way. While before there were only a handful of major streaming services for visual media, there are dozens of dozens now. Games could easily fall into that model, with individual publishers releasing their own subscription services or, at the very least, selling their licenses to the highest bidder with them being traded around routinely to others. This could easily mean that one game within a series be exclusively available on one service, whereas a second game in that same series be exclusively available on another. So, to play through the entire series, consumers could very well be forced to subscribe to a multitude of models.

The person being interviewed also doesn't mention (from what you've provided as excerpts, anyway) the very real possibility of games being de-listed across all platforms far in the future, which is not uncommon for other forms of media now.

Warmsignal

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #8 on: January 22, 2024, 12:08:28 pm »


Ubisoft does not deserve most of the hate they get. If you hate Ubisoft for making online focused games, the same franchises over and over, microtransactions, whatever then why not support Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown? First non-mobile Prince of Persia game in 14 years, many 9/10 reviews, $50 launch price, free demo across all platforms.. if this is the direction people want from Ubisoft it's out now ready to be bought and owned physically or digitally.

I do want to get the new Prince of Persia. I'm certainly not a full boycotter, but Ubisoft is one of the biggest offenders for releasing physical single-player games with an Internet requirement, which don't have a sound reason to require it, they're just being buttholes about how their games work, like The Crew Motorfest. You can play it single player, but you've GOT to have Internet connectivity just to do that because of they way the game relies on their in-game sales model, I guess. I'm almost positive that if you'd don't have Internet connectivity, you can't even launch the game. That kind of thing supremely sucks. Every game should be playable without Internet, even multiplayer focused games, if you so wanted. Ubisoft and EA are the leaders in doing this, and also in giving the general public the impression that games nowadays don't work anymore without Internet, but it's largely just their greed driven endeavors of in-game sales and massively bug ridden day one releases. That's where the hate comes in, and I think it is a bit deserved.
« Last Edit: January 22, 2024, 12:10:07 pm by Warmsignal »

sworddude

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #9 on: January 22, 2024, 12:16:17 pm »
If everything does end up going digital, I'll just be more picky in what I'll get. and preferably would buy stuff on sale.
Your Stylish Sword Master!



tripredacus

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #10 on: January 22, 2024, 12:40:02 pm »
I've basically been living the all digital life on PC for years now with Steam. I do prefer Steam more than the other platforms, mostly because the other clients have so much overhead packed into them. I can still play older games on older systems and computers so that really hasn't changed.

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #11 on: January 22, 2024, 12:59:32 pm »
I already refuse to pay full price for something I have much less ownership rights over what I had with offline DRM physical games. Not more than 20€. Imho for a good 10 years the majority of physical copies are already made pointless because of online DRM. You get a dust collector with the same ownership right you have for the digital release.

When digital only mutates into subscription service only, and that will happen, don't hold onto any illusions about it, I'll quit playing modern games.
« Last Edit: January 22, 2024, 01:01:54 pm by randomstranger »

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #12 on: January 22, 2024, 08:08:23 pm »
I don't really think it's gonna happen, in the sense that there's absolutely zero physical games. So it becomes a niche market, but it's not the end.


The main reason I doubt this is going to happen is looking at the state of physical media right now when we do still have physical alternatives, at least for gaming. I can't remember where I read this, but it said that the majority of games sales are now digital which does not surprise me at all. Streaming has killed physical movies/TV and music, and before that digital distribution (iTunes, Pay-Per View). Best Buy is getting rid of all their physical movies as we speak, and the selection at places like Target and Best Buy is sparse at best. Look at these store's selection of blueray/dvd players too; there is a very small section of about 4 or 5 blueray players to choose from now. With something like a game console, a significant portion of RnD has to go into adding physical media capabilities, and that's not to mention the added costs of making sure distributors and manufacturers can produce the games for your console. I guess what I'm trying to say is, why would Sony or Microsoft even bother with the added hassle of making sure their new consoles can play physical media when there is less of a demand, while still requiring the additional expense of catering to a minority of customers?


I don't think the console makers are going to keep things physical for a niche group of people. And if there's no way of playing physical media, this takes companies like Limited Run out of the picture, unless they are somehow releasing games on older consoles that have the ability to play physical media still. I don't know, I hope you're right, but it just seems like we are going in a very clear direction that other forms of media have already gone over the past 10+ years.

Warmsignal

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #13 on: January 22, 2024, 11:19:50 pm »
I don't really think it's gonna happen, in the sense that there's absolutely zero physical games. So it becomes a niche market, but it's not the end.


The main reason I doubt this is going to happen is looking at the state of physical media right now when we do still have physical alternatives, at least for gaming. I can't remember where I read this, but it said that the majority of games sales are now digital which does not surprise me at all. Streaming has killed physical movies/TV and music, and before that digital distribution (iTunes, Pay-Per View). Best Buy is getting rid of all their physical movies as we speak, and the selection at places like Target and Best Buy is sparse at best. Look at these store's selection of blueray/dvd players too; there is a very small section of about 4 or 5 blueray players to choose from now. With something like a game console, a significant portion of RnD has to go into adding physical media capabilities, and that's not to mention the added costs of making sure distributors and manufacturers can produce the games for your console. I guess what I'm trying to say is, why would Sony or Microsoft even bother with the added hassle of making sure their new consoles can play physical media when there is less of a demand, while still requiring the additional expense of catering to a minority of customers?


I don't think the console makers are going to keep things physical for a niche group of people. And if there's no way of playing physical media, this takes companies like Limited Run out of the picture, unless they are somehow releasing games on older consoles that have the ability to play physical media still. I don't know, I hope you're right, but it just seems like we are going in a very clear direction that other forms of media have already gone over the past 10+ years.

There's a big market for DVD and Bluray collecting still, the casuals might have moved on from owning movies a long time ago but there's still the demand for physical, so every new movie, show, or anime is still getting physical releases to this day. The presence at a retail level goes away or diminishes and gives the impression that "it's dead", but it's products that you can still order online. There's a shocking amount of amateur musicians and bands, which you still buy physical CDs or Vinyl from directly from their merch store, or specialty sites. Anyone who has a real following, has physical media probably dropping right this minute. Relatively speaking, record players aren't exactly abundant at retail, but there's a market for them and they'll always make them.

It's rumored that the next iteration of PS5 / XBOX will not include a built-in disc drive, but have the capability to connect an external one, like modern day laptops or PCs without a disc drive. Really all it does is read and install from a disc, what developmental capabilities are they spending resources on to allow for that? It's a device that's functional through a USB. Isn't a PS5 built off of common, non-propitiatory architecture anyhow? I'm struggling to see how it's difficult for Sony to implement external drive reading compatibility like any other piece of hardware on the market, going forward. Doesn't seem like it would be, particularly if that's the way they do end up going later on with the PS5. With Microsoft, I kinda think Xbox might not even be a thing next generation. They clearly don't want to continue in the traditional sense. Nintendo doesn't know how to manage a online network, I don't see them going digital.

I dunno, every other form of media has survived the onslaught of digital to various degrees and I think games will in a way, as well. Not entirely, but there will be an option. It might even be something that's not even in the picture currently that comes about to pick up the slack. I struggle to see Sony or Nintendo going all digital, with no physical compatibility. I think the best thing to do, is rid the defeatist attitude that it's all over. Keep buying physical games, cake up that market and make it worthwhile for publishers to keep doing what they've always done. Unfortunately we can't rely on physical retail space anymore, but you can still buy online. If I didn't have such a retro fixation, I'd be picking up a lot more modern games.

pzeke

Re: What are your plans when everything goes digital only?
« Reply #14 on: January 23, 2024, 03:30:55 am »
I don't think this topic is new around here, as I believe we've had this discussion before in some fashion. But sure, what are my plans when everything goes digital only?

I'll sail away and set an open course for the Virgin Sea 'cause I've got to be free—free to face the life that's ahead of me.

I never thought I'd quote that, but I mean it without an ounce of shame.


Jolly japeries aside, I already have one foot out the door as far as modern gaming is concerned; I can't help but keep losing interest in it with every passing day. But, in all seriousness, by the time this doomsday scenario becomes a reality, I'm quite confident that you, me, and possibly everyone here will either have become worm food or we'll be so damn senescent and senile that none of it will even matter.

[...] I can't remember where I read this, but it said that the majority of games sales are now digital which does not surprise me at all. [...]

But, if I'm not mistaken, those statistics are conflating not only PC AND digital-only downloads but also DLC and its ilk, with, I believe, mobile games on top of it, so I think that "majority" is wholly innacurate and, more than anything, disingenuous. All those articles spread about the 'net are painting the wrong picture.

All of this is a nonsensical boogeyman. Sure, the industry is desperately pushing for digital, so I'll grant you that we'll inevitably see this happening, but not yet—not in our lifetime, I believe. There are still too many hurdles, and, even though corporate greed is the devil in this scenario, it is also a contributing factor preventing this from happening. The people who are basically insinuating that by 2028, physical media will go the way of the dodo or will at least be less prevalent are spewing nothing but pundit hokum. This whole thing feels like the GameStop debate, where nearly every year its fate is discussed ad nauseum, but now let's add to that the "whether games will be digital-only or not by 20XX" circlejerk.

For the sake of transparency, I will say this: given that both Sony and Microsoft already released digital-only consoles and we've basically demoed that future, were the full transition actually come to pass in the next generation, it's not crazy to see a big scandal over it, somewhat similar in effect to when Sony wanted to shut down the PS3 and PSVita digital storefronts, more so given, as randomstranger pointed out, the argument over ownership and potentially even pricing. I'm not sure how things would unfold, but even if it's the "minority", people who prefer physical media still make up a big piece of the pie. But as I mentioned before, it's already a 50/50 deal for me, so the moment this does become our reality, I'm bailing out and won't look back.

I know your every move behind this face; I have control over expendable slaves.
When confrontation comes down to the wire, I'll use my cyclotrode to commence the fire.
You're never gonna get me!