- Dec 13, 2004
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So do you guys find you can't install some of your old games because of errors?
Maybe because of scratches or some other stuff?
Maybe because of scratches or some other stuff?
Originally posted by: Eeezee
This is why I've started heavily supporting digital distribution. Maybe I won't want to play Half-life 2 in 20 years, but I'd still like to at least own a copy (just in case)
Originally posted by: GodlessAstronomer
Originally posted by: Eeezee
This is why I've started heavily supporting digital distribution. Maybe I won't want to play Half-life 2 in 20 years, but I'd still like to at least own a copy (just in case)
I am betting that there is a higher chance of Steam being shut down in the next 20 years than there is of me damaging one of my physical disks. I would support digital distribution if my software wasn't tied down to some random company's software. Think of all of the giant development houses that have been shut down or reduced to mere shadows of their former selves in the past 20 years. Valve isn't too big to fail, no one is in this industry.
That is certainly a risk, but I think it's less likely than people think. The license rights that Valve own are valuable and if they were to go bankrupt they would sell them to another company. The Steam software itself is also valuable, not to mention the large customer base that visits the store regularly.Originally posted by: GodlessAstronomer
I am betting that there is a higher chance of Steam being shut down in the next 20 years than there is of me damaging one of my physical disks. I would support digital distribution if my software wasn't tied down to some random company's software. Think of all of the giant development houses that have been shut down or reduced to mere shadows of their former selves in the past 20 years. Valve isn't too big to fail, no one is in this industry.
Originally posted by: JoshGuru7
That is certainly a risk, but I think it's less likely than people think. The license rights that Valve own are valuable and if they were to go bankrupt they would sell them to another company. The Steam software itself is also valuable, not to mention the large customer base that visits the store regularly.Originally posted by: GodlessAstronomer
I am betting that there is a higher chance of Steam being shut down in the next 20 years than there is of me damaging one of my physical disks. I would support digital distribution if my software wasn't tied down to some random company's software. Think of all of the giant development houses that have been shut down or reduced to mere shadows of their former selves in the past 20 years. Valve isn't too big to fail, no one is in this industry.
I think you would need to see a failure of the digital distribution model itself to really jeopardize Steam products and I personally don't see that happening. Bandwidth continues to increase, customers still place a high value on convenience, and companies like Netflix have already announced they are adding a plan with only digital download viewing. I think it is more likely to see companies merge digital distribution across industries than we are to see digital distribution disappear.
