An assortment of news stories got me thinking of that phrase, "You will own nothing and you will be happy." Lots of things are now subscriptions or services. You don't own your movie, you have a membership with a streaming service that offers it. You don't own a record/tape/CD, you can stream it for a monthly cost. Your game pass renders games unusable if you stop paying...but you can buy a digital copy you do, in fact, own, right? Well, as of March 2026, it seems PlayStation has implemented a method to disable games from working if you don't connect to the internet with a digital game (that you supposedly own) at least once every 30-ish days. This wasn't announced or anything; people just noticed it and are hot pissed. Gamestop is taking advantage of this PR blunder, of course. Not all games have physical copies, however, which raises concern.
This new PlayStation fiasco also makes me think about comics people read online and how hard it can be to get a physical copy of certain stories if they aren't kept in print--and I don't mean weird, obscure stuff; notable arcs face this too, as Comicsbeat discussed. If we can't find physical versions of media and lack real control of our digital content, do we truly, "Own," anything? There are some cool games coming out this May, and I don't like the idea that Sony can simply say, "Nah, you bought this but ain't gonna play it." If I want to use a subscription service for my games, movies, television, comics, and what have you (and I do for some stuff), then that is fine! The concerns arise when I don't even have a physical ownership option, and my digital item, which I bought, is still treated as a rental. Perhaps some twisted Hell where everything is somehow a subscription service is inevitable, but I hope not. I like the option to at least truly possess my stuff within my own hands











