Sam Goody; for example - I can remember almost every single mall in the Twin Cities area (St. Paul & Minneapolis, MN) had a Sam Goody store that sold music and movies.....Last Sam Goody I recall seeing closed up in the Eden Prairie Mall about 3 (maybe even 4) years ago.
There will always be a niche for an actual physical copy of PC games, but that's all that it will be, a niche. I love looking at my physical collection of games build, but at the same time I realize that many of the games that I own (I'd venture to guess 60-70%) are for sale online in some digital format from a handful of different companies: Steam, gog.com, direct2drive.com, EA's online download thing....
It's cheaper for PC gaming to head this route instead of paying money to manufacture packing and CDs/DVDs....
Right now as I sit and type this, I have about 45 games (give or take a few) stacked to the right of my monitor that I've beaten and to the left of my monitor I have about 50-60 games that I haven't beaten or even opened up to play yet. Not to mention the other 35-40 games or so that I have in a box in a closest that I've beat. I love my collection.....
It'll be a sad, sad day when physical copies of games become obsolete and digital copies becomes the norm.
The GameStops around me (I've got 5 that I can easily travel to in under 20 minutes) used to all have a wall dedicated to PC games. Now they all have a wire rack-cart that sits towards a back corner - some of these racks house PC games on both sides and other stores only house PC games on one side. I can still find a great deal on PC games from time to time, but the selection has drastically dropped over the past 5 years.
Best Buy has even lowered their selection of PC games to basically 1 single aisle - whereas in the past, PC games used to utilize a full 2 aisles of shelf space. Sometimes an alright deal can be found at Best Buy - they're mostly best for when you want to buy a new game and you want it now.
I like Steam and what they offer, I just don't like how they offer it. According to their "Agreement" clause, they can basically shut you out of any game you paid for; for whatever reason they feel fits. Sad thing is, you can't do anything about it. If they deny you access....you're pretty much screwed. I'd much rather have a physical copy of a game then to trust a company that I've spent money on to allow me access to games that I paid for. I think I've put a good $150 into Steam for games they offer....if they all of a sudden, for some reason that I might not even be the culprit for, close my account....well, I'm screwed and I'll never see those games again. This is the main reason why I haven't purchased anything on Steam in the past 12-16 months and I won't anytime in the near future. Now I'm babbling....I'll stop here and head to bed.
neatfeatguy
Steam can shut you out of downloading games from their service should you do something silly like act like a smacktard on their forums (someone had a thread about this a few weeks back on here) but they can't deny you access to already downloaded games. Any steam account can be run offline and you have the option of making a Steam backup install of any game you download, which I do just so I don't waste bandwidth when I shuffle my games between my various rigs.
This is great news for games like Psychonauts, X3, etc but crappy news for games like Counterstrike Source and L4D. Still, I prefer this to Direct2Drive's installers that only work a limited number of times. Stay civil on the Steam forums and don't cheat in online games and you should be fine.
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