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I honestly don't understand what the issue is about.

Perhaps some of you are too young to remember this, but once upon a time, there were no DVDs. There weren't CDs, even. Yet, developers were brave and enterprising individuals who despite the lack of a suitable storage medium, continued creating games that grew increasingly larger in size.

These games were stored on floppies. 1.44MB each. Some games took perhaps 2-3 floppies. Others considerably more (If I recall correctly, Return to Zork took up 23 floppies; Windows 3.1 took up 13 floppies I believe).

If you wanted to play a game that required 23 floppies, you had two options:

  • Don't play it
  • Swap 23 floppies for the install, and play it

Swapping can be a pain, I admit - that's not the issue here. The issue is many of you make it like swapping is such a bad thing when in fact it's been around forever - and we lived with it and still played the games we wanted.

The Playstation game Parasite Eve was released on two CDs. Half Life came in two flavors - a DVD version, or a 5 CD version. Don't tell me that if MGS4 was released on 2 Blu-ray discs, or in five DVDs you wouldn't be interested in it. I know if I let 23 floppies bother me back then, I would have missed out on one of the best point-and-click adventure games of all time.