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also agreed.
if i pirated a game it would be because it's not worth buying. if i owned a game on dvd-r that i did not have an original copy of it would be because i never intended to buy that game because i didn't consider it worth playing. i buy games i consider worth playing. hence, the industry has not lost any money, because i have not pirated a game that i would otherwise have given them money for.
i also think it's a good idea to push the limits of existing consoles. isn't it interesting how we get a new console with brilliant graphics surpassing it's predecessors, yet years later we get games with graphics that put them to shame - on the same console. using the exact same hardware, developers have managed to squeeze extra performance. compare Gran Turismo 3 and 4, or Red Faction and Timesplitters, early PS2 FPSs, with recent FPSs. it's also interesting that with consoles you can get so much more than PCs. what spec of PC would you need to run Gran Turismo 4, if it were available? certainly a PC with more than a 300mhz CPU which is what the PS2 had.
if they spent more time working with the hardware they had, they would save a lot of people time and money in upgrading. throwing more powerful hardware at games to make them slightly better is complete overkill compared to what they could achieve with a few lines of better code
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