Hooray digital distribution?Apparently purchases made through the new service only have access rights for six months. That means if you want to re download the game after 6 months...you can't. This can be extended for two years if you spend an extra $6 at purchase time.
So you shell out full price for whatever it is you're buying on this download service. You download it, and then you only have a 6 month window to download it as many times as you like. Soon as that expires, you better have had that shit backed up to a DVD or you don't get to download it again. Or hey...give us even MORE money for an extended limited time.
While its stupid, I honestly can't say I entirely blame them. This is an issue that will crop up with any of the major digital distribution players. Like Steam, for example. I got into a short discussion about it, that Steam will eventually have to have ads in the client. Its inevitable.
Reason being is bandwidth isn't free. Ok, say I pay $50 for Orange Box on Steam and then download it. Obviously those $50 help pay for the bandwidth. But how many downloads of this data can I make before it starts costing Valve more than what I paid? Thats several GB per game, times however many games I have. Plus...games are only going to get larger and larger, and the price isn't going to match it.
I'm not the best case here because I don't download huge things like that. I back my shit up so I hopefully never have to download it again. But other people aren't like me. If they want to play HL2 on their laptop or work PC they don't copy the files to a disc and transfer them around, they load Steam and download everything from scratch on those other computers. Thats a lot of data transfer for only $50 (and some of that is, you know, for the games development). Not to mention the patching that happens for various games.
So eventually the free ride will end. First Valve will put ads in the client to help offset the cost. They already tinkered with in-game ads for CS1.6, so that may become more common. Then they'll add download limits such as "once a week" or "once a month" or something. Who knows where it might stop and become sustainable, they may even go all the way to where EA is now.