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View original on lemmy.world
games·GamesbyFmstrat

A site for making physical releases out of digital games

Yea, so this doesn't exist, but should it?

Think about:

  • TheMovieDB style identifiers with box art
  • Auto-generated and/or community created and upvoted DVD labels, case inserts, or USB/SSD stickers you can print yourself (no reason physical media has to be "round")
  • Automated scripts for generating local media savers/installers from GOG and Steam

This doesn't seem like a very difficult thing to create for the niche community of people that want physical copies.

View original on lemmy.world
159

29 replies

That is a cool idea. Thanks im gonna do some research now.

8

Someone should make cases for mini NVMe SSDs to turn them into cartridges. NVMe SSD are technically plug and play and with an NVMe extension cable you could move the slot to the side or top of the case. Expensive as fuck to use NVMe for a single game, but much faster than SD Cards and they don’t wear down as fast and will retain the data longer when unpowered.

3
lemmy.world

If you want the game to last forever, it assumes you've already got it sourced from somewhere DRM-free, where you can continually copy it to other healthy media. Nothing lasts forever, but this is meant to replicate a lot of the strengths of old consoles, fortunately without some of their own pitfalls like save batteries.

5
retrolemmy.com

SSTech requires power to maintain cells.
What we need is liberated schematics Blu-ray burner+ readers, so you can burn even a small cast, and reread until your descendants^50^ make another copy.

2
piefed.social

Doesn't recordable optical media also have a pretty limited lifespan? Unlike commercially produced discs, where the pits are pressed into the plastic, CD/DVD/BD-Rs just have a dye that is made to change colour with a laser, and that dye degrades over time.

6
SkunkWorkzreply
lemmy.world

Even pressed discs can rot. Like many WB Blu-Rays were made with a faulty process and many will rot in the next few decades.

4

All things decay, not even the doping of ROM chips will last forever, but I think the average lifespan of recorded optical media is like, 10 years? That feels rather short.

1
piefed.social

Huh, that's interesting. I already expressed my thoughts on consumers making their own physical media in another post (tl;dr: I don't think it makes much sense), but if there are recordable discs with lifespans comparable with pressed discs, maybe a print-on-demand service could be a solution for developers that can't afford to order a batch of a thousand discs and cases and rely on digital distribution because of that.

2

I consider’m backups. I make & test’m often. I’m even making multiple copies of the same “game” in one BD, to ensure when a BD needs to be reburned.

2
lemmy.zip

I mean, that's basically what Limited Run Games do.

15
lemmy.world

Didn't they go out of business? I mean....they will NOW! Make a PS6 physical disc all you want, but if Sony never releases a PS6 with a disc drive, what good is it?

4

Just had a look and they're still in business, although they were acquired by Embracer Group, so... Tick-tick.

But yeah, you're right that even companies like that will go the way of the dodo if consoles abandon physical media.

7
piefed.ca

Erm, there are a few of them that do the box art/moviedb style thing, they just dont host the game files.

Will edit with links in a bit.

6
lemmy.world

You ain't got started yet?

Any which way you look at it, it's gonna entangle with legal battles with the developers..

6
fonix232reply
fedia.io

Not if it's a self hosted project for your personal use.

4

What does 'self hosted' even mean?

I glitched the Internet Archive, and have terabytes of stuff stored there. Accessible worldwide.

However, I cannot share links here, understandably against community rules.

-2

Why would a legal battle ensue? I don't believe OP is suggesting profiting off any of these IPs, just providing a database.

1

It feels like it would kind of defeat the purpose. If you like the ritual of physically picking a game and putting it into your machine, there are more practical ways of going at it, like those NFC card-based systems like Zaparoo. If you like having a physical collection, it seems to me that having a bookcase full of labels made with a home printer and with none of the legitimacy of them being "the real thing" would feel rather empty. You can't legally resell it or lend it to others and if you care about preserving the game without being dependent on an external service that can go down at any time, you're probably better off keeping several backups of your hard drive than counting on flaky recordable media (hard drives don't last forever either, but you're more likely to regularly check on the health of a couple of hard drives than potentially hundreds of BD-Rs and SD cards).

Basically, very few of the advantages of physical media would end up remaining.

4

all it could achieve is sending a signal to publishers to make physical copies... which may be good

1

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