I made the differentiation because Blu-Ray movies are still the best and better than streaming.
Meanwhile physically recorded video games are pretty much dead.
Jon_Irenicus_PL: Do you miss the days of physical games?
For instance, that feeling when you plop the disc into the tray, and hear it whirl inside?
Do you miss the smell of a freshly-bought, unsealed copy you just picked up at you local store?
Do you miss the cool menus that showed when you would plop the disc into the tray and it would show "install", "uninstall", and "settings"???
Would you like to return to those days?
timppu: So what are your answers to those questions? You show yours, then I'll show mine.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjRNMmLjo6E I started hating physically recorded video games when they started requiring you to actually constantly keep the disc in the tray to play the game. This was really infuriating. Why do I need to search for the "Play" disc of a game whenever I just want to play it? It actually caused me to lose many discs. Say, i want to play game X, but I cant find the box for the game Y that's already in the tray. So I put game Y somewhere out of sight, until I find the box. And then, someone of my family will move it, or I will forget where I tugged it away, and It'll take me months to find the disc and play the game again.
Plus, I have a bad memory from my childhood when I took a game from my cousin (who didn't want it anymore) and I destroyed it while taking it out of the disc holder.
So, don't force me to keep the play disc in the tray, and don't make stupidly inconvenient disc holders, and I wouldn't even mind physical recorded games today.
Of course, GOG is the best, but physical is better than Steam.