Gaming

Nothing's made me want to reject modernity more than this videogame scholar documenting the installers of yesteryear – PC Gamer


The year is 2024. You’ve just purchased a new game on Steam. You open your library (or click the prompt on your receipt page) and direct the storefront to your SSD. You hang around a while to see how fast your download speed is, doing the prerequisite fretting over whether your internet is suddenly dying without you noticing, then go back to your life.

It’s not exactly a process that builds hype—I mean, it’s functional most of the time. Stress-free, even. But we’ve traded out convenience for theatre. The game installers of yore used to give you a feeling of transition from the ordinary doldrum of your life. A reward for buying and inserting a disk—animations, music, terrible font choices—a little treat while you waited for your computer to do its thing.





READ SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.