Box art is cool. Instruction manuals are cool. So why has everyone gone to digital games? Is it convenience, or something more?
Two Point Museum is getting its first DLC next month, with curators gaining over forty more exhibits to display and many new items to decorate with.
Lara Croft and co bring two new exciting tables to Pinball FX in the form of Tomb Raider Pinball, although one in particular is a standout, providing some of the best licensed pinball so far.
I was thinking of buying the real table (or the unveils and Dragons table) for my game room. These games are fun but can’t replace the real thing
The Outerhaven writes: The Steam Summer Sale is here, and if you're into fighters, whether you're throwing fireballs, unleashing Heat Attacks, or flailing crabs, yes, that's actually a thing, some serious steals are waiting for you right now.
Well its seems there's a first for everything...
“So why has everyone gone to digital games?”
Yet charts still show that console gamers still buy more games physically than digitally, so it’s not “everyone” transitioning over.
See how fast that addiction lasts, when one of the games you bought, gets pulled from the service you invested in, and there is no way to get any money back from it.
I enjoy getting a physical game. But after several decades I've realized they just take up allot of space. And especially today with so much sales on digital games and with a upcoming streaming service on Xbox I'm going all in on digital. It's just to convenient not to. I'll be able to take all my games and play them on a wide range of devices soon like my phone and tablet to mention a few.