Games to be put on blu-ray in the near future?

This topic is locked from further discussion.

Avatar image for ishkoo
ishkoo

315

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#1 ishkoo
Member since 2003 • 315 Posts

With the fomat war being over (HD-dvd is dead), does this mean games for PC are gonna start being put on Blu-ray in the next couple of years?

I'll welcome the change. I'm already seeing games come with multiple DVDs (Orange box) so we must be running out of space for dvds.

Avatar image for -Master_St3ve-
-Master_St3ve-

1421

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#2 -Master_St3ve-
Member since 2007 • 1421 Posts
Crysis is on only one DVD and Orange Box comes with multiple games so I would asume each game has their onw disc. For the PC I really don't see Blu-Ray helping. It would still be cheaper to use more DVD's then one Blu-Ray disc. We have a HDD so it should be fine for a while.
Avatar image for CheeChee_Macko
CheeChee_Macko

2236

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#3 CheeChee_Macko
Member since 2008 • 2236 Posts
A couple of DVDs is preferable to the 6+ CD games of the past. I'll be happy with normal DVDs until they get above 4 DVDs.
Avatar image for artichoke
artichoke

2271

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#4 artichoke
Member since 2006 • 2271 Posts
I don't see it happening for a couple years. Most games require only one dvd with a couple exceptions being 2. It's cheaper to produce multiple dvd's than one bluray. And since the games are installed we don't need to worry about switching cd's.
Avatar image for cobb45
cobb45

1179

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 5

User Lists: 0

#5 cobb45
Member since 2004 • 1179 Posts
no not any time soon, you would need a blu ray drive (expensive). The orange box only comes with two discs, you download the games from steam.
Avatar image for mfsa
mfsa

3328

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#6 mfsa
Member since 2007 • 3328 Posts

In the future? Yes.

In the near future? I would imagine not.

DVDs are much cheaper and DVD drives are in just about every gaming computer on the planet. To use blurays so soon would firstly to accept unnecessary expense and secondly to alienate most gamers. No company would choose that.

DVDs were around for at least three or four years before publishers started adopting them as their media of choice - before then, it was simply cheaper to use three, four or even five CDs. I can imagine the same being true of DVDs. We're only just now starting to break through into dual DVD games (and even those are exceptionally rare).

Maybe around 2010-2011 we'll start seeing blueray games, but I seriously doubt publishers would want to start using them right now. I mean, how many people actually have bluray drives? I bet it's less than 10 in any given 100 gamers.

Avatar image for ishkoo
ishkoo

315

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#7 ishkoo
Member since 2003 • 315 Posts

I see your points. Maybe 5 years from now, but not next year.

There are still games being put on multiple CD's today. When I bough The Burning Crusade last year, it had what, 5 CD's?

Avatar image for deactivated-5f0340ca5ecca
deactivated-5f0340ca5ecca

1890

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#8 deactivated-5f0340ca5ecca
Member since 2005 • 1890 Posts

I don't see it to be that useful for PC-Games , i think that the online vendors like "steam" etc will become the most popular .

And today a blu-ray drive costs more than some PCs do.

Avatar image for giantraddish
giantraddish

307

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 5

User Lists: 0

#9 giantraddish
Member since 2002 • 307 Posts

In the future? Yes.

In the near future? I would imagine not.

mfsa

I think you've hit the nail on the head.

Orange Box thing is a marketing or packaging decision. A DVD-ROM can hold around 4.5 GB and Valve lists the total hard disk requirement for the OB at 1.8 GB. I haven't seen any single game come on multiple DVDs yet.

The fact that games are still shipping on multiple CDs shows how conservative publishers are about moving to the next newest format.

Avatar image for Indestructible2
Indestructible2

5935

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#10 Indestructible2
Member since 2007 • 5935 Posts
DVD Came out in 1996 or 1997 if i remember correctly,yet it took several years before DVD only games began coming to the market en masse,i'd imagine the same would happen with Blu-Ray.
Avatar image for Deadly_Fatalis
Deadly_Fatalis

1756

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

#11 Deadly_Fatalis
Member since 2006 • 1756 Posts
Either In the future i think it will mostly either be Blueray or Digital Distribution.
Avatar image for Mehfuz
Mehfuz

10290

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 52

User Lists: 1

#12 Mehfuz
Member since 2005 • 10290 Posts
Orange box has only 2 dvd and those don't use the full dvd disc capacity, so i don't think we need 50 GB blue ray , but in the future, maybe 4-5 yr later - when blue ray drive will be availalbe like dvd drive with similar price like today's drive - published will go for BR
Avatar image for nutcrackr
nutcrackr

13032

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 72

User Lists: 1

#13 nutcrackr
Member since 2004 • 13032 Posts
Maybe 4 years.
Avatar image for ishkoo
ishkoo

315

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#14 ishkoo
Member since 2003 • 315 Posts
Maybe when games' native resolution are at least 1080p
Avatar image for Ondoval
Ondoval

3103

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 0

#15 Ondoval
Member since 2005 • 3103 Posts

In PC size of the game is not directed related with the technical quality or resolution. Crysis weights 6 GB and can be played at 1080p; the more important factor in the visual quality are now in the shaders, which requires a high level of performance, not a huge space to the textures. I run Crysis on High at 1680 x 1050 in High at 34 fps under XP (I have a Q6600 oced to 3.0 Ghz, 2 GB DDR 2 800 Mhz and an Asus EN 8800 GTS 512.

But today the blu-ray players to PC cost around 200 € and disc about 10 €; in a couple of years the optical drives will cost near to the today's DVD drives, and the same one with the BR disc. Then nobody will use DVDs as today nobody -sic- uses CDs (well, maybe a few).

Avatar image for Ps2stony
Ps2stony

1888

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 8

User Lists: 0

#16 Ps2stony
Member since 2006 • 1888 Posts
Oh hell no! Then how will we brag about getting the same game for 10$ less?!
Avatar image for juggernaut8419
juggernaut8419

872

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#17 juggernaut8419
Member since 2003 • 872 Posts

There isn't much reason to go Blu-ray on PC any time soon because of the unpacking to HDDs. They can compress the textures they need onto DVD and unpack them on installl. If they want more lossless video and audio they can just expand to multiple DVDs. It doesn't make much of a difference if you only have to switch once on install and forget about it.

As video RAM and the size of uncompressed textures goes up and developers want to keep said textures from lossy compression algorithms blu-ray will become more viable. That is a while in the future at which point blu-ray manufacturing costs will be way down.

Avatar image for GodLovesDead
GodLovesDead

9755

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 8

User Lists: 0

#18 GodLovesDead
Member since 2007 • 9755 Posts
We are sort of just starting getting used to DVDs. Multiple DVDs isn't an issue for PC gaming, because we only have to use them once.
Avatar image for ishkoo
ishkoo

315

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#19 ishkoo
Member since 2003 • 315 Posts

In PC size of the game is not directed related with the technical quality or resolution. Crysis weights 6 GB and can be played at 1080p; the more important factor in the visual quality are now in the shaders, which requires a high level of performance, not a huge space to the textures. I run Crysis on High at 1680 x 1050 in High at 34 fps under XP (I have a Q6600 oced to 3.0 Ghz, 2 GB DDR 2 800 Mhz and an Asus EN 8800 GTS 512.

But today the blu-ray players to PC cost around 200 € and disc about 10 €; in a couple of years the optical drives will cost near to the today's DVD drives, and the same one with the BR disc. Then nobody will use DVDs as today nobody -sic- uses CDs (well, maybe a few).

Ondoval

I don't think you quite understood what I meant. Video games have a native resolution. for example, most games on the Xbox 360 have a native resolution of 1280x720. If you play on a 1080p tv, the console must UPSCALE the video to fit the screen. Likewise, if you play on a 4:3 SDTV, the console must DOWNSCALE the graphics to fit on that screen.

With PC games, it works very similar. There's a native resolution that the developers decided on, and they use the game engine to upscale/downscale the image to whatever resolution you set it to.

*correct me if I'm wrong*

Avatar image for GodLovesDead
GodLovesDead

9755

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 8

User Lists: 0

#20 GodLovesDead
Member since 2007 • 9755 Posts
[QUOTE="Ondoval"]

In PC size of the game is not directed related with the technical quality or resolution. Crysis weights 6 GB and can be played at 1080p; the more important factor in the visual quality are now in the shaders, which requires a high level of performance, not a huge space to the textures. I run Crysis on High at 1680 x 1050 in High at 34 fps under XP (I have a Q6600 oced to 3.0 Ghz, 2 GB DDR 2 800 Mhz and an Asus EN 8800 GTS 512.

But today the blu-ray players to PC cost around 200 € and disc about 10 €; in a couple of years the optical drives will cost near to the today's DVD drives, and the same one with the BR disc. Then nobody will use DVDs as today nobody -sic- uses CDs (well, maybe a few).

ishkoo

I don't think you quite understood what I meant. Video games have a native resolution. for example, most games on the Xbox 360 have a native resolution of 1280x720. If you play on a 1080p tv, the console must UPSCALE the video to fit the screen. Likewise, if you play on a 4:3 SDTV, the console must DOWNSCALE the graphics to fit on that screen.

With PC games, it works very similar. There's a native resolution that the developers decided on, and they use the game engine to upscale/downscale the image to whatever resolution you set it to.

*correct me if I'm wrong*

I'm pretty sure you're wrong. PC Gaming has no native resolution because there is no set standard resolution. It's done entirely different on consoles because there's only a few resolutions to choose from.

Avatar image for nutcrackr
nutcrackr

13032

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 72

User Lists: 1

#21 nutcrackr
Member since 2004 • 13032 Posts
[QUOTE="Ondoval"]

In PC size of the game is not directed related with the technical quality or resolution. Crysis weights 6 GB and can be played at 1080p; the more important factor in the visual quality are now in the shaders, which requires a high level of performance, not a huge space to the textures. I run Crysis on High at 1680 x 1050 in High at 34 fps under XP (I have a Q6600 oced to 3.0 Ghz, 2 GB DDR 2 800 Mhz and an Asus EN 8800 GTS 512.

But today the blu-ray players to PC cost around 200 € and disc about 10 €; in a couple of years the optical drives will cost near to the today's DVD drives, and the same one with the BR disc. Then nobody will use DVDs as today nobody -sic- uses CDs (well, maybe a few).

ishkoo

I don't think you quite understood what I meant. Video games have a native resolution. for example, most games on the Xbox 360 have a native resolution of 1280x720. If you play on a 1080p tv, the console must UPSCALE the video to fit the screen. Likewise, if you play on a 4:3 SDTV, the console must DOWNSCALE the graphics to fit on that screen.

With PC games, it works very similar. There's a native resolution that the developers decided on, and they use the game engine to upscale/downscale the image to whatever resolution you set it to.

*correct me if I'm wrong*

yeah you are pretty much wrong. while I'm sure they spend a lot of time testing the game with 1024x768 and 1280x1024 and the popular widescreen resolutions that monitors support the most (1440x900 and 1600x1050) Crysis scales any which way it wants. Resolution is completely separate from the game if you like. Its just how sharp the image can be. There is no native resolution for PC, only native resolutions for monitors.

Oh and consoles can do the same as well, its just at the end of the rednering they upscale or downscale it to those native resolutions. A few games on 360 and PS3 run below 720p, but upscale at the end.

Avatar image for PandaBear86
PandaBear86

3389

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#23 PandaBear86
Member since 2007 • 3389 Posts
Blu-ray offers more than large data storage, it also offers higher read speed (12x speed Blu-ray is equal to 40x DVD, which does not exist), and it is far more durable due to the protection layer, providing a healthy benefit to the consumer. The only major problem is the price, though I am sure that Blu-ray will be standard in a few years from now. Digital Distribution and Blu-ray physical storage will both co-exist as standards.
Avatar image for Swiftstrike5
Swiftstrike5

6950

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 17

User Lists: 0

#24 Swiftstrike5
Member since 2005 • 6950 Posts
Blu-ray is way to expensive to be seen anytime soon. Unless the price of blu-ray players goes down dramaticly... I don't see companies using anything other than DVDs, which most people have already. I'm looking forward to the holographic disks and flash drives.