Yup. It's the same price for hard and soft copies right? And the Witcher franchise at least tried to add freebies when you get the game like posters, comics, and music. Too bad I can't appreciate them much since they're just files I can open and close on the PC. Holding an actual map of the game, a handbook, some items from the game; still would be more awesome than mere files, but at least they tried though.
For me it's having a permanent line to a game. One purchase and it's done. No more added expenses because of broken discs, scratches, or even because the game copy I have is now inferior (some games like Witcher 3 are kind enough to upgrade your game to the Game of the Year edition for free) so it's worth it. Also I can rack up my funds by selling the trading cards that drop on Steam, while having additional gameplay experience with completing the achievements.When you're lucky it's the same price for hard and soft copies. I've seen lots of examples through Amazon where the hard copy actually costs less! I really can't wrap my head around the economics of that one other than to say that convenience must be a much bigger factor for other people than it is for me. To go back on-topic a bit more, I'd even much rather go to a physical game-rental store than subscribe to a mail service which fixed all the little gripes I had about Gamefly. Those little extras that surround the physical market mean a lot to me.
Hopefully you got Dota 2 for a good price since it's free to play lol. As for AC games, lots of bad reviews for the more recent ones since it seems like they are milking the franchise now and not adding anything innovative. Just pick a time period and add "assassins" in the story that somehow manages to be the reason that a certain historical event takes place. Why not try something new?I have not bought any nice game without testing it. This has really help me to buy only quality games like Assassins creed, DOTA and the rest. My local game shop allows its 2 star rated customers to test any game for up to 40 minutes.
I also miss the old days of downloadable demos. I guess developers are too lazy to let people experience the games before buying and instead rely on trailers, gameplay reviews, and publicity.But this topic made me think... what happened to demos? Back in the days you could try a small portion of almost every game, to see if your computer was able to run it, to see if you liked it... Nowadays I don't see demos anymore, and it's a bit sad to think about it.
That looks like a good way to filter the games. I am not sure if we can have similar policy here. Instead people here would not be playing such game by buying it. So I am guessing though this policy is good I guess buyers have to be genuine as well. I have seen testing works to not waste the money on people.I have not bought any nice game without testing it. This has really help me to buy only quality games like Assassins creed, DOTA and the rest. My local game shop allows its 2 star rated customers to test any game for up to 40 minutes.
Right now people "rent" it by pirating the game. Basically to check if the game can run without problems on their PC (especially when you have a low end PC) They have to be honest when doing this though. If the game works and you like the game, support its developers by buying the game!Renting games is not something of actuality at the moment, but even when renting was popular among gamers I still preffered just listening to review and what people had to say then decide if the game is worth it or not.