Hey guys, what is your favorite gaming console? Playstation, Xbox, Nintendo switch???
Morningstarr wrote to All <=-
Hey guys, what is your favorite gaming console? Playstation, Xbox, Nintendo switch???
Hey guys, what is your favorite gaming console? Playstation, Xbox, Nintendo switch???
I think consoles were only worth it up to the 6th generation... afterwards, consoles became glorified computers with all the issues that brings.
Hey guys, what is your favorite gaming console? Playstation, Xbox, Nintendo switch???
Hey guys, what is your favorite gaming console? Playstation, Xbox, Nintendo switch???
I often felt like consoles were simplified computers, at least in the early days of consoles.. though in the 80s, consoles often had better graphics & sound capabilities than desktop computers did.
Hey guys, what is your favorite gaming console? Playstation, Xbox, Nintendo switch???
I'm a PC guy, but sometimes I fire up a portable Chinese NES clone with SMB3, Tetris and the like.
Hey guys, what is your favorite gaming console? Playstation, Xbox, Nintendo switch???
I also have positive memories of how it felt to buy physical media =)
I still buy physical media.. I've never bought anything on a streaming service, as I don't trust them. They remove content fairly frequently,
and I've even heard of cases where someone purchased a movie on a
streaming service and the movie was removed later.
I also have positive memories of how it felt to buy physical media =)
I still buy physical media.. I've never bought anything on a streaming service, as I don't trust them. They remove content fairly frequently, and I've even heard of cases where someone purchased a movie on a streaming service and the movie was removed later.
Re: game consoles
By: Mindsurfer to Morningstarr on Tue Dec 16 2025 09:21 pm
I also have positive memories of how it felt to buy physical media =)
I still buy physical media.. I've never bought anything on a streaming service, as I don't trust them. They remove content fairly frequently, and I've even heard of cases where someone purchased a movie on a streaming service and the movie was removed later.
I also have positive memories of how it felt to buy physical media
=)
I still buy physical media.. I've never bought anything on a streaming service, as I don't trust them. They remove content fairly frequently, and I've even heard of cases where someone purchased a movie on a streaming service and the movie was removed later.
Accession wrote to Nightfox <=-
Most of the time when you "purchase" a movie from a streaming service, you're not actually purchasing the movie forever, you're renting it
(just like you would from Blockbuster, back in the day).
Mindsurfer wrote to Nightfox <=-
correct, you just get a limited right to use/access the digital media.
It is really stupid. As soon as the company goes out of business or decides that it costs them to much to still provide the download, you loose access.
I also like the physical media, however several years ago my son
bought me a few games on steam that I never play. I have a big box
full of PS1/PS2 CD's that the grandkids comover and play.
I've also seen a lot of movies on physical media come with a code to
redeem a digital version on a streaming platform, which allows them
to stream the movie any time.
I was thinking of purchases, not rentals.
I've also seen a lot of movies on physical media come with a code to redeem
a digital version on a streaming platform, which allows them to stream the
movie any time.
I've seen this as well, but I'd imagine your digital copy is only as good as the service that provides it. It also probably comes with some kind of EULA or similar that states that they can remove it from their service at any time.
I was thinking of purchases, not rentals.
I guess I've never seen full purchases of movies from streaming services, but I'll take your word for it as I wouldn't put it past them to pull any kind of trickery possible on their customers. Times have definitely changed.
Yeah, I believe they most likely do come with a EULA. I've only
redeemed a couple of them, but I've never really watched them on
streaming if I own a physical copy. I tend to rip my physical
copies to put on my own media server, which is usually how I watch
them these days. I feel like I don't have a need for their digital
version.
I'm a little surprised. I've seen movies for purchase on streaming
services for years - at least some of them. Amazon has a lot of
them on their streaming service, Amazon Prime. For instance, this
is one example - The new Naked Gun movie with Liam Neeson - Amazon
has it to purchase for $16.99 right now (normally $19.99) or for
rent for $2.99:
I'm basically in the same boat, which is probably why I never really noticed the "buy" option, as I would never do that (which may seem odd, because that's how I "own" all my video games). However, I've paid $2.99, or under $5 to rent a movie knowing that I was only going to watch it once, and never again.
The new Naked Gun movie with Liam Neeson - Amazon has it to purchase for
$16.99 right now (normally $19.99) or for rent for $2.99:
I see what you're saying now, and with a little more digging:
"You don't own the actual video, you're granted a license from the content provider. Amazon will make the video available for however long the license allows them to do so."
"Unless you can play the file on the device of your choice at the time of your choice without ANY external validation, you do NOT 'own' the movie/song/book/game you just bought. You are 'licensing' it, and such a license can be revoked for any (or sometimes no) reason."
So it applies to just about any streaming service.
When you buy video games from an online store, at least you can
download the game and have it on your PC (or other device). I have
quite a few games I've bought from the Steam store.
I still have some older PC games on DVD-ROM & CD-ROM too..
Yep. That's why I've never bought a movie on a streaming service..
For that price, you could buy the blu-ray (or maybe the 4K blu-ray
for just a bit more) and have a copy that won't be going anywhere.
Agreed. I don't mind renting them for a few dollars, knowing that I'll probably never watch them again. But that's the same reason I usually wouldn't pay full price for them at all, either.
I'm a little surprised. I've seen movies for purchase on streaming services for years - at least some of them.
When you buy video games from an online store, at least you can download the game and have it on your PC (or other device). I have quite a few games I've bought from the Steam store.
I still have some older PC games on DVD-ROM & CD-ROM too..
I was thinking of movies rather than games, but this is good to know. In my experience, when you purchase a movie from a streaming service, they still use DRM/copy protection. Even if they might let you download it for offline viewing, you'd still need to use their app to watch it.
I don't even know where half of my digital games are, to be honest. If I really want to find out or play something I've uninstalled, I have to look up who made the game and fire up whatever game launcher the game came with. Off the top of my head, I have Steam, Ubisoft, Origin/EA, Battle.net, and probably a couple others installed here that all want to start up when you boot your computer. I've disabled all but Steam and have moved all of my non-steam games over to Steam so at least I can see them listed to remind me I have/own them. ;)
Regards,
I'd be mad if I lost a bunch of games, but I suppose that was the risk I took when I started buying digital copies.
When you buy video games from an online store, at least you can download the game and have it on your PC (or other device). I have quite a few games I've bought from the Steam store.
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