BibiMaghoo
Member
Not sure why you would as a collector open sealed games to check them. That seems like an odd thing to do.
Not sure why you would as a collector open sealed games to check them. That seems like an odd thing to do.
Even if they do succumb to rot, those physical copies will probably far out last their digital counterparts' sever availability. Out of my collection of about 20 physical PS4 games, there are maybe 2 that have been drastically altered since release by patches. Only one of them I would consider unplayable without its day one patch.Another reason to stop buying physical: your security is an illusion.
I've made the argument before, but the necessity of patches makes disc preservation pointless, anyway.
That's why they should dump all these games and store them digitally.
Discs will rot but digital data lasts forever.
Please tell me where to find my DLC's for the original Xbox.
dlc was a mistake, industry should have gone with mailing mini-discs with additional content
Please tell me where to find my DLC's for the original Xbox.
Please tell me where to find my DLC's for the original Xbox.
Either way, I don't buy old games as collector's items. I buy them to actually play them. If some of them stop working in fifteen, twenty, or however many years, I'll have gotten my enjoyment out of them.
I have discs dating back over 25 years and I never seen this.
Not all collectors care about resale, and not all factory sealed games are valuable.
No, but a sealed game is usually more valuable to the collector themselves than an open one, and if it is meant to be kept sealed it wouldn't matter if it was damaged over time.
Me neither, but I have a pretty nice environment for them here.
I am willing to bet my physical collection will still be going strong long after the digital services are gone.
Well, it depends. Hard drives die and can have bits flipped, but if you keep multiple backups, and at least one of them is a mirrored RAID disk, and you transfer to new media every ten years or so, the chance of anything getting lost is really low.Except it unfortunately doesn't.
So game collecting is like passing a bomb, as long as you sell it new&sealed everything is fine. The one collector down the road who opens his sealed copy to actually play it (the absolute madman) might destroy his investment if he spots the disc rot? Sounds fun.
RAID IS NOT SAFE, and not a backup method. Especially not the common versions at home, but ultimately any one.I found a solution: An ISO image. Then put the data on a RAID and replace disks as they keep failing.
There should really be a public institution that does this with all digital media.
SOCOM II had extra maps that were only available on a disc that came with the PlayStation magazine and needed to be transfered to the PS2 HDD.dlc was a mistake, industry should have gone with mailing mini-discs with additional content
I really, really want to back up my DC, GC and Wii discs :/ I keeps pushing it because there's no easy way to do it (I'd buy a PC reader that can read those, but not second hand at $200+)
RAID IS NOT SAFE, and not a backup method. Especially not the common versions at home, but ultimately any one.
I've discussed with a friend that handle a lot of raid arrays, the simultaneous failures of discs in most devices is really, really high.
If you value your data, store it on at least three discs, in different locations (thefts, fire), some of them not plugged, and run crc checks on a regular basis.
If you use the data often, raid is handy, but that's far from safe.
Jesus, something sounds very wrong here. Wonder what caused this so quickly.Most of my Wii U library died becuase of this. I cannot believe how bad it is they didn't last two years.
Jesus, something sounds very wrong here. Wonder what caused this so quickly.
Ironically though, Wii U is the only current system that you can backup and run your files natively through homebrew.
I'm trying hard to avoid the obvious joke here about dry rot.Funny to see your avatar in this thread as the only time I've run into disc rot was a CD-R burn of PJ Harvey's Dry.
That's why they should dump all these games and store them digitally.
Discs will rot but digital data lasts forever.
Most of my Wii U library died becuase of this. I cannot believe how bad it is they didn't last two years.
Are there any precautions that one can take to avoid this problem?
Once again digital downloads prove to be the superior format
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I burned PDS on cd-r and played halfway through with 0 problem. Maybe it can now?Another reason to stop buying physical: your security is an illusion.
I've made the argument before, but the necessity of patches makes disc preservation pointless, anyway.
Some Saturn games just won't work on CD-R, including Panzer Dragoon 2: Zwei & Panzer Dragoon Saga.