Like many people, I’ve been thinking about physical media lately, and how our entertainment items – movies, albums, books – used to be things that sat on a shelf that someone else could see and say, “Hey I like this thing on your shelf.”

PC games were one of those things, once. I have a few. And I’ve scrounged them up from their various moving boxes and parents’ houses to see if they still work.

Does anyone here still play a game from an optical drive? A game where your regularly-played copy isn’t the Steam version?

For me, Morrowind was the last game that I was still playing on a disc. I have newer games on discs, but just played those once or twice and then put them back on the shelf. But I was still playing Morrowind from a CD up until 2023, when it went on sale on Steam for $1, so I bought it. I almost didn’t get it, since I liked the fact that I was still playing a game on a CD.

I plan on taking inventory of which games still work and what it takes to install them today.

What were (are?) some of your favorites?

  • Swordgeek@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    I’ve got a portable DVD player, and I’m going to use it to install the original Psychonauts onto my son’s computer, so he can see what the meat circus was like before they softened it.

  • Jay@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    I dusted off my old xbox 360 a month ago and played a few games on it. Aside from that, not for quite a few years now.

    • tuckerm@feddit.onlineOP
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      2 months ago

      I should still have that somewhere as well. That was one I didn’t find, but it should be around.

      Do you need a battle.net account to play Diablo 2, or can you just install and play offline if you only want to play singleplayer? I haven’t been able to find a clear answer about this, since everyone talking about it these days is talking about the download-only version.

      • Whostosay@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        If you have the key within your disc carrier, you should be solid.

        I think you can download it and still play single player even on the remaster, which was solid btw.

        There are also pirated versions that you could utilize given that you already own the software.

        There are also 3rd party moded communities like path of Diablo.

        Path of Exile 1 & 2 are crazy good and true successors to Diablo 2 if you haven’t checked those out. They blow Diablo 3/4 out of the water in gameplay.

  • MudMan@fedia.io
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    2 months ago

    I still have some floppies in working order, even.

    But no, I don’t play them regularly. It’s just easier to make a backup that doesn’t need a disk in the drive. Even most of my retro PCs these days run out of a large-ish hard drive replacement, so keeping games outside their unreliable original media and the original media elsewhere is a better alternative.

    It’s a bit different on consoles where carts are harder to duplicate and ingest, as well as being more reliable and loading faster. Floppies and optical media, particularly when you can access the files, less so.

  • warbond@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    2007, I think. I had recently moved and didn’t have internet hooked up yet, so I bought BioShock as a physical disc so that I wouldn’t have to wait. Imagine my frustration when I learned about the online-only authentication bullshit it used for DRM, so having the disc didn’t even matter; without Internet I couldn’t play the damn thing at all.

    • tuckerm@feddit.onlineOP
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      2 months ago

      Piracy hysteria was at an absolute fever pitch in 2007 – those online activations are what make me think that much of my physical collection won’t be playable anymore.

  • SSTF@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I buy and play a bunch of old games from an EBay seller who sends both the original disc and a disc with a copy of the game that loads dosbox stuff or whatever else to make it work easily on a modern system without fiddling around. It’s pretty great.

    I have a bunch of strategy and sim games.

    • warbond@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Hey, is it okay if there’s a place where we’re not being fucking advertised to all the time? Fuck off with this.

  • schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 months ago

    Last one must have been GTA 4 (I’ve meanwhile bought this on Steam so I can play it without) or Crazy Taxi (came with a cereal box in my childhood).

    • warbond@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I bought GTA4 for like $8 during a Steam Sale shortly after it came out, back when Steam Sales were crazy good. An absolute steal for such a great game.

  • neon_nova@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    Now I want to install a game to a disk and run it from the disk drive, my dad’s old desktop has a drive. I wonder if it can burn dvds.

    Maybe I could install stardew valley to the disk.

    • tuckerm@feddit.onlineOP
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      2 months ago

      I’ve been wanting to do this, too, for games that I bought on Steam. Like, make a bootable Linux DVD that has Steam and the game preinstalled on it, with Steam already logged in as my account.

      • neon_nova@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 months ago

        I was thinking it would be easier with gog games.

        You can just burn the install directory to a disk and then insert the disk and launch the game without launchers

        • thingsiplay@beehaw.org
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          2 months ago

          Some Steam games can be played without Steam. Some require more and others less or none work to achieve that. GOG is the better choice for this task, but if you already have Steam game that could work for this, maybe no need to rebuy it on GOG. I was thinking of doing something similar to archive what can be archived, but never got around doing it. Here some resources:

            • thingsiplay@beehaw.org
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              2 months ago

              There were special long lived BlueRay format https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-DISC . I was thinking of getting into, but they were expensive when I looked at it years ago. With 100 GB per disc, this might be a good solution for longtime archive (but you need the reader too…).

              As for the CDs and DVDs, the longevity also highly depends on the burner, the blank disc and maybe the software and settings you used at that time. A pressed CD that you buy and its not burned can hold data for very long time, and is much more durable than your burned ones. At least compared to a mechanical hard drive you don’t need to reuse (rewrite) to not loose data. But a hard drive can hold so much data.

  • wirelesswire@lemmy.zip
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    2 months ago

    Starcraft 2 for me. I haven’t had an optical drive in my pc for probably 10 years or so. The last “physical” game I bought was Mass Effect Andromeda, and it was just a box with a download code inside.

    PC gamers were incentivized to move away from optical media asap, since optical drives read slowly compared to HDDs, and SSDs are even faster.

    • tuckerm@feddit.onlineOP
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      2 months ago

      Yeah, I had forgotten how slow an optical drive was, and how that was usually the limiting factor. I installed Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear from the original CD a couple days ago, and it took about 20 minutes to install on my current PC. I’m pretty sure that’s about how long it took in 1999, too.

      Downloading it from Steam takes about 10 seconds.

  • the16bitgamer@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    I get a lot of old oc games on disc from thrift stores all the time.

    However once I confirm they work I back them up and continue to use them in a disc emulator.

    Technically last week realistically a very long time ago.

      • the16bitgamer@programming.dev
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        2 months ago

        Disc rot is a thing, so backing up a bin/cue for CDs or ISO for dvd is always a good idea (if it hasn’t been backed up already)

        Monopoly 1998 was what I played last week. Nothing ran it except my XP laptop

    • tuckerm@feddit.onlineOP
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      2 months ago

      I almost went that route, but kept moving my disc drive from one PC to the next just for Morrowind. I didn’t have room for it in my latest build, though (I put in a tower cooler for the first time), so I bought an external DVD drive.

      So, how far can you throw those DVDs?

  • Hexarei@beehaw.org
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    2 months ago

    My last physical media was the PC version of Titanfall, played in 2022 or so via USB disc drive. was surprised to find the entire game actually on the disc. Was pretty cool.