- Joined
- Oct 20, 2024
- Messages
- 6,067
- Solutions
- 27
- Reaction score
- 29,755
- Points
- 11,177
- Location
- Vossen Estate 🇦🇷❗
I feel that this has become an "oh, shit" problem only in retrospective, but it's a big one.
For the longest time it wasn't all that rare for players to consider manuals as part of the packaging to a game and many got thrown away as a result. We didn't really care about back stories or troubleshooting at the time, trusting the product itself to provide the answer and let us tame it with a little bit of virtual elbow grease.
Boy, what a mistake that was.
Now, console gamers got largely spared of the need of manuals because there truly wasn't much to the vast majority of them (complexity-wise), but losing these has proven downright suicidal for PC gamers, specially for those who owned rather obscure games with little-to-no hope of ever seeing a scanned copy uploaded somewhere.
I can't even tell you how many horror stories I have heard in recent years about people being unable to figure out parts of their ancient games because that info was nowhere on the software itself, but relegated to the manual.
Myself? I have kept most of them, but mostly because kid-me thought they looked cool and enjoyed flipping through the illustrations.
What about you?
For the longest time it wasn't all that rare for players to consider manuals as part of the packaging to a game and many got thrown away as a result. We didn't really care about back stories or troubleshooting at the time, trusting the product itself to provide the answer and let us tame it with a little bit of virtual elbow grease.
Boy, what a mistake that was.
Now, console gamers got largely spared of the need of manuals because there truly wasn't much to the vast majority of them (complexity-wise), but losing these has proven downright suicidal for PC gamers, specially for those who owned rather obscure games with little-to-no hope of ever seeing a scanned copy uploaded somewhere.
I can't even tell you how many horror stories I have heard in recent years about people being unable to figure out parts of their ancient games because that info was nowhere on the software itself, but relegated to the manual.
Myself? I have kept most of them, but mostly because kid-me thought they looked cool and enjoyed flipping through the illustrations.
What about you?
Last edited:
