I just thought of something:
Would it make sense to switch back to cartridges instead of Blu-Ray/DVD/Wii-U discs for gaming? Cartridges, with flash memory can already surpass that of Blu-Ray in terms of storage data and the load times will be almost non existent. Gone are the days of the N64 vs PSX, when discs could hold so much more than cartridges. Also it would partially eliminate the need to download part of the game to the hard drive since the read time is so much better.
Granted I can't see physical media lasting longer than a console generation or two, considering the benefits and prevalence of digital downloads, but it is still a thought.
Perhaps a new theoretical console could have an cartridge slot for the main games, and an internal hard drive for general storage as well as game updates. Alternatively, make the cartridge both readable and writable so one could just update the game on the cartridge. If not flash memory, then regular ROM cartridges could work too if it was somehow rewritable.
What do you think? The only con that I can think of is higher costs since flash memory is more expensive than discs. Then again 3DS cartridges are cheaper than DVD based games and it can hold more data. The 3DS carts can hold up to 8GB of data vs the 360's DVD's that hold 4.7GB-8.5GB depending on if it is dual layer or not..
Would it make sense to switch back to cartridges instead of Blu-Ray/DVD/Wii-U discs for gaming? Cartridges, with flash memory can already surpass that of Blu-Ray in terms of storage data and the load times will be almost non existent. Gone are the days of the N64 vs PSX, when discs could hold so much more than cartridges. Also it would partially eliminate the need to download part of the game to the hard drive since the read time is so much better.
Granted I can't see physical media lasting longer than a console generation or two, considering the benefits and prevalence of digital downloads, but it is still a thought.
Perhaps a new theoretical console could have an cartridge slot for the main games, and an internal hard drive for general storage as well as game updates. Alternatively, make the cartridge both readable and writable so one could just update the game on the cartridge. If not flash memory, then regular ROM cartridges could work too if it was somehow rewritable.
What do you think? The only con that I can think of is higher costs since flash memory is more expensive than discs. Then again 3DS cartridges are cheaper than DVD based games and it can hold more data. The 3DS carts can hold up to 8GB of data vs the 360's DVD's that hold 4.7GB-8.5GB depending on if it is dual layer or not..