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Calmador said:
disolitude said:

When it comes to disk based gaming, on top of drawbacks involving game storage, potential disk damage and disk drives burning out there exists the issue of swapping disks.

People around here seem to be saying how swapping disks isn't that big of a deal. Who in the right mind is so lazy that they can't swap a disk when they want to play a new game?

I happen to disagree...

Below is a scenario showcasing the difference between Xbox One and Xbox 360 when it comes to playing disk based games (before the DRM reversal)

Xbox 360 Xbox One
  1. Accept the invite
  2. stop your current game
  3. Take out the disk
  4. find the other game disk
  5. pop the disk in
  6. Wait for the game to load (my god, the title screen intros!)
  7. Wait for the match to connect
  8. Happy hunting 
  1. Accept the invite (continue playing current game until other game loads, and match connects)
  2. (new game starts) Happy Hunting 

I find this to be a big difference in terms of time and convinience. People that don't base their lives around gaming but try to squeeze it in when possible should feel the same. When you have 15-20 minutes to play game in a day before life throws something else your way, the time you save and gaming you get by not having to swap disks makes a huge difference.

Xbox One will still work like this for digital games, however retail games are most likely going to function same as Xbox 360.

Just an FYI for those that keep insulting people for being lazy about swapping disks...

I really don't think that's a lot of time. We're talking about 2 minutes. I'd say that's a good trade-off for having vastly more power over what you bought.

Anyways, I think long-term wise we're all going to benefit from staying disc-based... Actually I'd like to return to cartidged based. The cartidge technology is strong enough today but it costs more for them. However, it benefits us because they are WAY more durable. I'd be willing to pay a few bucks more for that. There are things that we're much better in the past.

Id campaign for cartriges to make a return. That would be ballin'...

Otherwise i see digital beneficial for the exact reasons you described. More power over what I bought... Its mine to keep and use forever with no risk of it getting lost or damaged, I can be transrered anywhere its playable without much fuss and its ready to be consumed and used any time hardware is available.

Only place digital stumbles is resale and DRM requirements. I fully understand why this is a dealbreaker for some people...but for some, its not that big of a deal. and 2 minutes of extra game time in a 15 minute gaming session along with a slew of other benefits makes digital worth it.