ragesRemorse
Senior Member
Originally posted by Smasandian
Ten dollars for a game for a week isnt bad, but 3 games a week rental is bad?Of course it is. Its three games. What do you expect?
Most games dont actually have a demo to play. So, you cant just dl the demo to try it out. For example, if you play an RPG, a demo wont show anything but renting the game will.
Im not saying its a good thing, but renting is not dead. Considering this thread is all about how you cant get a game shows that its not dead. Its still a viable business because there are numerous amounts of people who just want to try the game out, or rent the movie instead of buying it because its alot cheaper to rent a 5 dollar movie than buy the 25 dollar copy of it.
I was just trying to show, that depending on the frequency of your renting, ten dollars can be either acceptable or expensive. If you are a casual renter then the prices are most likely more than acceptable to you. If however, you like to rent more than once a week rental prices are going to hurt.
Perhaps i used to term "dead" a bit to liberally but i believe without doubt that renting as we know it is dying and to most people, dead. Of course there is always going to be some type of video renting services. Whether this is done online or through video kiosks i expect to see the decline of video stores increase over the next decade.
Ten years ago there were little to no stores that dealt in buying selling and trading movie's. Today, they are everywhere. You can walk into a CD warehouse, Exchange or many different stores offering the same services and buy a new movie for $10 and then exchange the same movie for $3. The Hollywood Video i worked at suffered greatly by stores like these. This was before online renting and services like netflix. Now you can rent movie's for a $1. So, it is only a matter of time before Video stores become extinct.
No, you can't play a demo for every game but as time goes on this will change. Consoles offer a generous amount of demo's and are usually very good at listing both, highly anticipated titles as well as the more obscure ones. The demo's they offer are growing in size during each release month. Consider the future of gaming. The future lies in downloadable content and games. When the next generation of consoles allow you to purchase and download games within moments companies like, gamefly will most likely offer the same type of service for renting. The publishers themselves may even offer a rental service by then. I don't think Renting is dead just dead in the ways that we once knew it.