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GamesRadar
GamesRadar
Technology
Dustin Bailey

Ghost of Yotei is the latest in a long line of Collector's Editions that doesn't come with a physical game, and I'm starting to think nobody understands what game collectors actually want

Ghost of Tsushima sequel Ghost of Yotei reveal trailer screenshot.

Ghost of Yotei pre-orders went live today, and they came alongside the reveal of a Collector's Edition which, as per PlayStation's increasingly annoying tradition, doesn't actually come with a physical copy of the game. Instead, this $250 version of Ghost of Yotei comes with a digital code for the game, and it's starting to feel like nobody actually understands what game collectors really want.

This Collector's Edition follows the tradition most similar releases do these days, where you get an array of knickknacks surrounding one, big centerpiece item. In this case, it's a standing model of the Ghost Mask, which admittedly looks pretty cool. But man, if I'm spending $250 on a video game, I want a real copy of that game to put on my shelf, too.

(Image credit: Sony)

I'm a video game collector, which broadly means that I like buying physical games to keep as a proper, tangible library. All those other goodies in these Collector's Editions are nice and all, but the thing I really want to collect is the video game itself. If I wanted everything, I'd be buying the CE and rebuying the game itself on disc for another $70.

The fact that the CE only has a digital game shouldn't be a surprise – Sony's done the same with Horizon Forbidden West, Marvel's Spider-Man 2, and even the upcoming Death Stranding 2, and we've seen similar moves from publishers like Square Enix.

Perhaps the most infamous example was last year's Dragon Age: The Veilguard Collector's Edition, which didn't come with the game at all, whether in digital or physical form. I'm starting to think that might actually be the more attractive way to go, though, because then at least collectors who want the game on disc won't have to buy it twice.

Retro remake dev calls Switch 2 game-key cards "disheartening," says you'd hope a company as big as Nintendo "would take preservation a little more seriously."

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