No need to apologize.Owyn_Merrilin said:Sorry about the industry thing; I could have sworn you admitted to it earlier in the thread. As for the whole planned obsolescence thing, there's a product becoming obsolete, and a product that was designed so that certain features would only work for one person, who couldn't then sell on those features. If any other industry tried it, they would have been sued into oblivion. The games industry gets away with it, but it's blatantly an attack on the first sale doctrine. They only get away with it because they're able to lobby congress and weaken basic consumer rights -- kind of like the DMCA, when you think about it.
The first-hand buyer only has ownership over the physical product and the entitlement to enjoy whatever experience the physical product provides. Any and all content within that disc still belongs to the publisher/developer. What rights do the first-hand buyer have to "sell on the feature" within the game? He does not have that right. Its illegal. All he is allowed to do is sell the physical copy of the game which he owns. Thats it.
Have you seen these self-destructing E-books? That is worse. With games, you are retaining the physical copy at the very least, and you can still access a large part of the content. With these e-books, you can kiss the copy goodbye when you used up your quota. Restrictive use is slowly gaining popularity.