“ You know what else requires always online? Your online console features. They’re entitled to their view and to support or not support a title based on practices displayed by the publisher. I’ll still play it and I’m sure the game will be great BUT just because people have a different opinion than you doesn’t mean they’re being “melodramatic”. If it’s not going to stop you from playing then more power to you. Which defeats the purpose of buying a physical copy. It’s not a patch, you are literally downloading the game. OIMyersIo 25d ago (Edited 25d ago think a game that requires you to “download” a patch to make it play isn’t a big deal at all.” Your Bluray disc are just an authentication code granting you rights to a game, that can be taken back if the distributor chooses If you'd like a list of file sizes to show you've been played all along on this thinking all your games are on a disc you own, you're wrong. How big was The Last of Us: Part II? Yeah, I hate Electronic Arts, but unlike other devs and publishers, at least EA are courteous enough to tell you where everyone else tries to quietly sweep it under the rug. Games are HUGE these days, ALL OF THEM, with exception to Nintendo's that never require updates and fit on cartridges l, and Bluray disc maximum capacity discs, Dual-layer, are only 50GB still. I just bought Titanfall 2 digitally last night for $3.50 on the PS Store and the game was 60GB (the original PS3 HDD) and took 3 hours to download and used up data in an ISP market that's getting ready to re-enforce data caps which means when you go over, you pay, and while 4K streaming is available, you're encouraged to stream SD resolution to keep up your limit. The game isn't stored on the disc, it's just an activation code.
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