eli5: Why are games sold in disks? Wouldn’t usb drives be more efficient and save space on the console?

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eli5: Why are games sold in disks? Wouldn’t usb drives be more efficient and save space on the console?

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11 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

Switch cartridges are essentially micro SD cards. Nintendo have more or less always flown in the face of standards and done their own thing. Even the micro CDs with the gamecube and Wii were different.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The **fixed cost** of an optical drive is of course much higher than the fixed cost of a USB port.

However, the **variable cost** of optical disks is much lower than the cost of thumb drives.

(EDIT: **At high volumes**, it is much cheaper to “press” the data onto disks at a factory, like how movies are currently put on DVDs.) If optical disk burners did not exist, then it would be cheaper to sell **low-volume** games on thumb drives. But optical burners **do** exist, so it’s almost as cheap to burn disks and then mail them out.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The others are right about the price, but you should consider that Nintendo does sell their games on what is essentially “usb drives.” They have constantly run into the issue of cost, though.

Anonymous 0 Comments

USB drives are much more expensive. They don’t seem like they’re that expensive, maybe $10 or so for one with the same storage as a blu-ray. But when you’re mass manufacturing, a single blu-ray disc costs pennies to produce. Shipping on USB drives would either increase the price of games or make less profit for the publishers.

Also, as we go into the next generation of consoles, USB drives won’t be fast enough. The SSDs that are going to be in next gen consoles wipe the floor with the speeds of a USB drive, so you’d have to install them to the SSD anyway.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Discs are cheaper. That’s really all it boils down to. Another $1 per copy on thumb drives is a lost $5,000,000 if they sell five million copies.

Anonymous 0 Comments

This thread would have made sense 8 years ago, it makes no sense today. Physical media will be phased out the same way headphone jacks on phones was, and the same way floppy disks were years and years ago. Nintendo may be an exception, but I don’t see Microsoft or Sony bragging about outdated usb drives replacing disks anytime soon. Once the game is installed on your console, what’s the point? Do you really want to have to keep a bunch of USB drives laying around? I lose them when I only have 1 or 2. You’d also be forced to keep the usb drive plugged into the console to play it, the same way you have to keep a disc in your console.

Anonymous 0 Comments

CD’s/DVD’s are cheap which maximises profits, USB’s would be great but to expensive, but ultimately what game publishers really want is all digital as that means more money direct to them, less expenses spent on physical media.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Uh, Nintendo Switch?

Anonymous 0 Comments

Discs are mass produced in factories, they cost pennies to make and they take seconds to be made (it’s like stamping a disc).
They’re easy to ship, either in paper/plastic envelope so super thin, easy to hide inside a paper manual or a small booklet, or you can put it in jewel case/box/whatever in a standardized size, again easy to ship.

An USB stick contains multiple parts (plastic case, metal connector, fiber glass circuit board, silicon chips like the flash memory chip and the controller chip).
Yeah there’s usb drives as small as a finger nail, but they still take time to be manufactured.

It takes more time to be programmed… you have to format the drive, test the flash memory cells and mark bad ones, then copy the information, check that the information was written correctly.
The drives can also be damaged by ESD … static electricity from your fingers getting close to the contacts inside the usb stick…. it’s super rare but it can still happen.

IF you make it super small, you may still have to use some bulky packaging .. imagine a finger nail sized usb stick flying around in a big Amazon box maybe getting stuck between the cardboard folds of the box and the person complaining the stick didn’t arrive. So, you end up with blister packs or big bulky packaging for the usb stick…