[quote name='crzyboy88']I always found Gamefly too expensive for me. I don't get too much time to play, so spending at even the OP's discounted rate of 12.50 a month, I'd be spending much more than I normally do. If you look at my Spending tab, Ive spent about $170 this year, but I've gotten so many more games than I could have through Gamefly. Not to mention that I could keep all the games I have now forever, and I wouldn't have to pay a single penny more. Also, if you look at my tab, there are months in which I don't buy anything, that would just be a waste of a money to me.
I'm not saying Gamefly is bad, it's just that you need to have a lot of free time to really get the most of it.[/QUOTE]
True, our habits are way different though looking at your tab (I should start budgeting my shit too now that I think of it). I mean on Black Friday alone I spent more than your annual expenditures. I'm also a grad student with lots of free time to game and no real big expenses to worry about either (no car, cheap phone, rural town rent, assistantship to cover tuition, etc.)
I don't know, the thing is that when I get a new game, I beat it in like 2 days (i.e. Halo 3), and then I barely touch it because I only play multiplayer in games my friends play on Live. I feel like the model just fits my habit. I got Halo Wars today and I'm already through like half the missions and I'll never feel like playing the multiplayer... So gamefly has already paid of 30 bucks off the cost of Halo Wars new on Amazon.
Have you used netflix? what do you think of this model applied to movies instead of games?
I think my traditional idea of owning games has been shattered... In the digital download age I feel like hoarding games is obsolete, it's not going to be like old floppy disc games or cartridge games where stuff's going to be priceless in the distant future... I can already buy half my favorite classic games for pennies on Steam now.