Direct2Drive Launches Download Rental Scheme
by Alice O'Connor, Jan 25, 2011 10:30pm PSTDigital distributor Direct2Drive quietly launched a rental scheme for downloadable PC games last week, though so far it's looking somewhat less than inspiring.
D2D charges $5 for five hours of playtime, then if you want to keep the game, your $5 will be knocked off its price. The selection is very limited at the moment, with only Divinity II - Ego Draconis, F.E.A.R., Race Driver: Grid and Silent Hill: Homecoming available now. D2D notes that "our rental selection will grow in time."
While the PC game digital distribution market is fiercely contested, there are only a few players in digital rentals. Cloud gaming service OnLive offers 3-day and 5-day rentals on a large selection of titles, generally priced at $5.99 and $8.99 respectively for modern games. Digital distributor Green Man Gaming has dipped its toes in with $1 weekend rentals, though it charged full price up front and returned the rest as store credit.
Steam, the big daddy of digital distribution, does not currently offer rentals. It does, however, at times offer something better--'free weekend' events, where every Steam user can play the full version of a certain game for free over a weekend. So far, these have focused more on multiplayer games than those based around single-player.
While Direct2Drive's rental scheme is none too exciting at present, it may become a little more attractive in the future if the terrible trend of publishers not releasing demos of PC games continues--and if D2D can get a decent lineup together at a good price.
EA puts Fight Night on hold in favor of UFC
Sanctum 2 review: friendly fire
Grid 2 sets world record for most expensive Special Edition
ITC rules Xbox did not infringe on Motorola patent
How an 'immature smartass' helps Shadow Warrior reboot








Comments
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 9 replies.
Steam: For people who will impulsively buy ANY game if it hits $10.
D2D: For people who hate risking having terrible games on their list permanently, now they can just rent them and get rid of them.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 2 replies.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 4 replies.
Instead of a free demo to try the game out, you can pay $5 to play a "demo" and then decide if you liked it enough to buy.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 4 replies.
As much as Direct2Drive doesn't want to sell games with Steamworks in them, I don't want to sign up for a Direct2Drive account. I already have Steam and it works rather well.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 3 replies.
You must be logged in to post.