Mark VII
Posts: 1838
Joined: 8/11/2003 From: Brentwood,TN Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: 2Stepper quote:
ORIGINAL: Mr.Frag Personally, I don't buy the damaged cd thing. I have had computers since before hard disks were invented and I have never lost any software to damage. If you care about it, you'll take care of it. If not, you pay for a replacement. I'm sure you'll find zero help if you walk into Blockbuster and say your DVD is scratched. They'll be more then happy to sell you a new one and thats about it. Why should software be *any* different then movies/music. You get it, it works. You trash it too bad/so sad but no one really cares. Copy protection is mandatory these days, not an option. I will lay money that someone here will be posting the software on a service like eMule within the first week of it being released. It is a sad world full of evil people that we live in these days. Don't pretend otherwise. Couldn't agree more Frag... you make a valid point. OK, I have no problem with the copy protection method of requiring the dvd to play the game. It prevents illegal copying, thats good! Sometimes its a pain in the butt, like when I went on vacation once, brought my wife's laptop along but then leave the disk in my desk top at home. NO UV for a WEEK, including the 9 hour drive each way(oh, the humanity), but I got over it, my fault. I think the original intention of the question about a damaged disk(for what ever reason), was could it be replaced without paying the original full $70+ again. A dvd costs less than a dollar to reproduce/burn per unit(not counting artwork, packageing, etc) provided its in the 10,000+unit range(maybe the WiTP dvd run will be less, so that "less than a dollar" cost will go up some). The rest of the $69+ is to recoup the costs of programing, research, testing, time spent on the project, support, and all the other "things" needed to put a game out that runs correctly(something that Matrix does well). The actual cost of reproducing a dvd disk(provided a large run) is nothing compared to the costs of producing the master disk! Should I not be able return a damaged disk to Matrix, pay $5 to $10 for a new disk, and another $5 for shipping. I have already paid the original $70+ for the first disk and the "right" to play the game under the license, why pay the full price again if I am returning the original "damaged" disk? True, I have also yet to damage a DVD in my computer, but you never know what might happen.
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