Pheace: Honestly, the way things are headed I think DRM *and* NO-DRM is going to become obsolete in about 20 years or so anyway because a lot of gaming will eventually be done through streaming.
DRM would become obsolete only if all, or almost all, gaming would go streaming.
When talking about streaming gaming, I don't understand that kind of black and white thinking at all. Some think that pretty much all (or at least all "AAA") gaming in the future will be only through streaming services, while some think streaming will utterly fail and not be a thing at all.
I am more in the middle. I think there will be maybe even some relatively successful streaming game services around in the future... but they will not kill the "local gaming". The two will simply co-exist.
Why wouldn't they coexist? Why would a game publisher think "I will NOT publish my games on Steam anymore, but only on Google Stadia!". Why? As long as there are lots of gamers outside of streaming service, it would be kinda silly not to sell the game also to them, irrespective whether you decide to sell the game also on some streaming services.
Maybe the logic goes that in the future 99% of gamers want to play only through streaming services and not on their gaming consoles or PCs... but I don't see that happening either unless almost all games had moved to streaming only.
The hen and egg problem. Most publishers would not go streaming only unless that's where most of their market would be... and users won't go streaming only unless that is where most of their games would be. One has to happen before the other one.
And no, Netflix does not prove anything as Netflix etc. is mostly a replacement for renting movies from video stores, or subscribing to a movie cable TV, not buying movies for yourself as DVDs. The people who ever bought movies was always a small niche market compared to rentals or movie cable TV subscriptions.
(Also, it actually seems to be possible to copy streamed movies and TV series to yourself pretty easily... so in case you encounter a movie you want to "own" in a streaming service, it might be only a few clicks away, even if you are not really allowed to do it, without the risk of being caught like would happen if you downloaded the movie from a pirate site.)
timppu: First of all they were inconvenient, trying to find the manual or code wheel before you could play the game, and read it.
GameRager: Or make a chart of what symbols/etc mean what to input into the game and using that.
timppu: And it that code wheel broke down from too much use or my proverbial dog ate the manual (ok I don't have the dog, I ate the manual myself), then no game for me anymore, even if I still had the original CD or the floppy disk.
GameRager: As I said, make a chart or a backup of sorts....problem sol-ved.
More often than not, making such a chart would be near impossible, which was kinda the point. Like with the aforementioned code wheels (are you actually going through all the different positions of the wheels, and writing each of them down one by one from the hundreds if not thousands of different combinations?), or from the past I recall some games where you had e.g. silhouettes of different ships that you had to look up in the manual. Good luck writing those silhouettes down.