Posted July 11, 2019
bhrigu: I guess streaming movies/music is different from games. Those mediums are much more limited in their relationship with the audience, mostly. And then if one likes a movie/album so much that they want to own it, they can purchase physical media, and I don't feel ownable media is going away anytime soon.
There are many movies/albums unavailable for retail purchase, and sadly the number only seems poised to increase. I don't know about a platform for film, but Bandcamp at least provides the option of purchasing digital albums in FLAC format (some labels will even have a value option to purchase the entire label's digital discography). Was very glad to see it linked on FCKDRM.com. f1e: You have to buy Witcher 3 on GOG and PS4 separately, and you'll have to buy it separately on Switch as well. That's the actual outrageous day-to-day reality: no single point of purchase with access on all supported platforms. That would be more drm-free than having an offline pc-only installer. That's what actually matters, not the possibility of a top-tier provider going completely down without any trace. Evin If steam or ea or amazon goes out of business it's only because someone bigger and better got established and serves everybody and no one cares about steam or ea or amazon anymore. You think you'll care? And if you don't like being dependent on always-online internet think about how you put up with being dependent on always-online power grid.
With all due respect, no. "Access on all platforms" is inherently NOT going to be DRM-free since nearly all platforms require DRM (and there are no signs of this changing). How would you solve the problem of the other platforms needing to "verify" access?
An offline installer is fully DRM-free for a PC release. The fact that people purchased other versions from other PC stores or console ports, doesn't change this fact.
No kidding everyone is dependent on an always-online power grid. So why add extra digital steps that compound the problem, i.e. increase the chance people can't access their games?
As for do I think I'll care, yes, I'll care. I remember what PC gaming used to be and have the potential to be. Going mainstream ruined that, and was in no small part thanks to corporate apologetics...