Dr. Light said:
I love it when DD lovers go on and on about "plastic boxes". As if it were about material value. The value of a $10 bill is not the value of the paper it was printed on. The value of plastic is non-zero, so therefore it is always worth more than electronic ROM data which is worth absolutely zero.
Look, clearly you care more about playing than owning. Most people do. Most people aren't collectors. But I consider myself about 60% collector 40% player. I frequently buy games solely for owning, never playing. The $325 I paid more than 7 years ago on Ebay for a sealed copy of Panzer Dragoon Saga that will never open comes to mind. Many other sealed games that I paid $50-100 for. I downloaded Alundra for $6 from PSN so I can actually play it, and not have to open my $100 signed sealed copy. This is normal for collectors. Coin collectors don't put their coins in vending machines, stamp collectors don't put their stamps on the electric bill. The vast majority of my games are not sealed and I can play them freely, which is why game collecting is vastly superior to coin/stamp/baseball card/fungus collecting (in my opinion).
Personally, I'm starting to like Steam quite a bit. I like Steamworks, I can buy a hard copy and still get Steam's community features and not need to touch the disc (I like to keep touching my games to an absolute minimum). Losing resale rights is a bitch that you have to live with for virtually all modern PC games, frequently even ones that have a disc check. So I'm willing to compromise on that. I'm NOT willing to compromise on having a physical copy of a game. If I didn't care about ownership, I'd only buy games that I was actively playing on a regular basis, and frankly that is rather a small percentage of my games. 14 of the last 24 - and 6 of the last 8 - PC games I've bought have been collector's editions. Think of all the lost revenue if I had bought the games as cheaply as possible instead. Why would companies sacrifice that income?
Blizzard has the right idea. They cater to everyone - you can download if you want, you can buy a standard physical copy (much better than most), or you can buy a really kickass CE. They have a ton of crap for sale on their website, both digital and physical. They even got me to subscribe to the WoW magazine (which is quite nice, btw). More extra revenue. On the other hand, Valve is trying to squeeze out people like me, and fuck them for it. I bought the disc copy of L4D2 even though it had the most minimal packaging imaginable (short of a code in the box) because I firmly believe that something is always better than nothing. If I ever stop believing that, the industry will be worse off without my business, or anyone else it drives away through relentless nickel-and-diming.