daheikmeister said:
Craftybonds said:
I was thinking to myself the other day about how i rarely play my games more than once through now. This meaning replaying through on the same difficulty setting, or replaying simply to revisit the story. I don't know if it's that now i have better access to money, or if it's the rapid release of games, or maybe it's that the achievement system has us all brainwashed into moving to a new game as fast as possible.
I don't know what it is, but there's only been a few games from the last 2 generations that i've felt compelled to play through more than once; but i always find joy in hooking up my psx/n64/snes and replaying some of those games from ages ago.
Dear God I hope not. If one is simply going to play through it once, then one might as well just rent it for a week, and then there goes the entire gaming industry. There's still some games worth replaying eg. Mass Effect 2 or Oblivion, but generally the trend seems to be more on the multiplayer aspect of gaming.
Renting doesn't kill the industry, it helps it if anything. Games tend to not make a whole lot of money past their first few months after release, after that, most everyone is just buying then retrading used copies of games. This is why companies (IE; Capcom) tend to re-release games frequently, for that extra boost in sales. Renting helps the industry by purchasing very large quantities of games upon release, when there is a high demand for games, renting companies buy in proportion to that demand. Gamefly, for example, will buy a quantity of a certain game, proportional to the amount of people who have that game in their queue prior to release.
DLC only strengthens the idea of profitable renting. I can tell you right now, that i've spent at LEAST 300$ on DLC from games that i've rented this year alone. Hell, i can't even use that DLC after i return the game, but i still buy it if the core game was good enough.
Of course, after a few months pass, aside from the profits off of DLC, renting services are just as profitable as buying and selling pre-owned video games (for the industry, of course)