Well guys, this is it. E3 is just days away and since we haven't had new consoles for like 8 years, minus Wii U, having new console reveals still has me feeling so exciting, and so scared! While everyone seems to be focused on the xbone and creepy cam, I'm actually more worried about the issue of backwards compatibilty or lack thereof and what it means.
New shiny games aren't always necessarily better games, or hollywood style visuals don't always represent a "better" gaming experience. This site alone is constantly updated with games of yester year that I never heard of, or community members who post news of discovering an old game and getting excited about it for the first time. A lot of us are still playing the game of catch up with the library of used games out there that will eventually disappear. As the latest PB & Jason podcast mentioned, people who sell used games use that money to buy "Newer" games and limiting this ability to resell your property might actually cut out of profits of a new game release as opposed to increasing them. But I digress.
"Backward Thinking: Shunning support for older games isn't just bad for players--it denigrates the entire art form.," a new article from gamelogical.com makes a very good case about how the gaming industry is adopting the attitude of disposability and denigration towards the video game medium and culture.
"It’s generally understood that the medium is a deeply important part of our culture, that we generally do a poor job of determining what from today will have value tomorrow, and that the best practice is to maximize preservation and availability."
It's an article that is worthy of reading. It talks about how in the old Television industry, the practice of erasing tv shows maximized reusability of tapes and so a lot of TV content was erased forever at the cost of a new medium, tapes. The TV industry did a poor job of valuing what was worth preserving and neglected the importance of the cultural significance of TV at the time.
Sony and Microsoft are selling you a "gaming" machine that doesn't let you play the games you actually enjoy. Also, the integration of DVD compatibility is actually expensive, considering all of the licensing for patents and such, but it's included because Sony and Microsoft have decided that film and television are a higher art form worth preservation as opposed to older games, and if Sony and Microft won't elevate gaming medium, then who will?
I'm so excited...I'm so scared!
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