Yeah, I never got one people made such a fuss about that. I mean, I get it, it's an issue..but has it ever been such a problem that it's made digital games totally not a viable option? Have we heard horror stories about people companies shutting down and folks losing hundreds of dollars of games? Not really, because..usually such things happen long after everyone has moved on. Are most people just REALLY into wii shop right now and gonna be screwed over by it going down, even though it was honestly on way longer than it needed to be?
I get that digital games end much harder than physical games and that sucks, but chances are by the time you see that end you probably won't need them anymore. Everything ends eventually.
Things I have experienced over the years:
-Gamestop employees letting me buy NES games out of the employee hold drawer becuase they were discontinuing NES sales and hey, let's sell them to this girl becuase
no one cares about these old games. Accquired Kid Icarus, Donkey Kong Classics, & Bubble Bobble, plus assorted others I've forgotten. Maybe $50?
-Was gifted a SNES & games from a friend who's mom was getting on her case for owning too many systems. And hey, let's given them to my weird friend who plays these
old games no one cares about. Donkey Kong Country 1-3, Link to the Past, Mario RPG, EVO Search for Eden, Starfox, several others.
-Was gifted a massive pile of Dreamcast games from a co-worker who found them cleaning out old boxes & knew I played retro- and hey, I can give them to someone who'll actually use them, becuase
no one cares about old games that I know except her. Shenmue 2, euro version, with boot disc.
-Had a Gamestop manager actually come out of the back to look at me when I went to buy my brother a used Gamecube for Christmas and requested a black one. When the clerk asked him to check, he didn't actually believe someone was there to buy one- becuase hey,
no one cares about those old games.
My point is, saying no one should be upset over server shutdowns becuase
no one cares about those old games has forgotten the lessons of the rise of the retro bubble. The lack of value I subscribe to digital content is due to the difficulty of keeping/recovering the content long term, not becuase the games themselves aren't worth having. Also- the reason no one's mad about losing hundreds of dollars in digital content is becuase we haven't had a major content provider go offline until now. Wii probably won't be the best case study for people's reaction to lost digital content, since wiiware wasn't heavily promoted. When the 360's shop goes away, that'll be the one to watch how people react when the nostaglia kicks in.