I understand if they stopped printing new blu rays / DVDs, but it’s outrageous and disappointing I can’t just buy the digital edition.

Is there an actual reason companies do this? Do they hate money or what?

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I mean, can you give an example or two?

    There’s probably not a single answer for everything. Depending on what you consider “old” there’s a chance no one saved a copy.

    It might be that contracts were better back then so the studio wouldn’t make much releasing it.

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        So it’s a region locking thing.

        That sucks for everyone. I remember back in the day when vpns got new regions, and there was so much more available.

        But physical media needs to be physically produced. It’s available in DVD and I think it came before Blu-ray even so you’re kind of asking a lot here

      • jqubed@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        If it’s on physical disc in one region but not where you live, it might be possible to purchase that disc and ship it to your home. While it might be region-blocked on the disc, there are ways to bypass that with certain disc players or converting them on your computer. The legality of bypassing region-blocking may vary depending on your jurisdiction, but from a technical standpoint it’s certainly possible. It’s probably less legal liability than going straight to piracy (especially compared to the liability from torrenting where they try to claim someone’s engaged in illegal distribution).