Why You Shouldn’t Keep Your Retro Games in a Shed

3DO heart-break

Exploring the perils of storing your classic game collection outside. Shawn Pidich’s heart-wrenching experience with his 3DO disc collection: After storing his game CDs in a shed, Shawn found that all but one has succumbed to disc-rot. The only disc to survive was DOOM, which had been left in the console itself.

The Decay of CDs: Disc Rot Explained

CDs, once thought to be eternal storage media for our favorite game collections, have a finite lifespan. Factors like oxidation, UV exposure, water damage, and adhesive failure can cause disc rot, leading to games becoming unplayable due to the deterioration of the reflective layer on the surface.

The Cost of a Mistake in Storage

Shawn’s unfortunate situation serves as a cautionary tale. By storing his precious collection in a damp shed, he inadvertently set his games up for failure. CDs are notorious for being susceptible to environmental factors when exposed to such conditions, making outdoor storage not a viable option.


Have you faced issues with your game collection due to extended storage? How do you ensure the longevity of your retro games?

26 points

Shows how important preservation is. Got to remember that a lot of our media was made in the cheapest way possible esp in the later times.

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6 points

CDs are particularly susceptible to this. DVDs far less so, and Blu-ray (modern games) will likely outlive all of us—if not stored in a shed.

Fortunately, ripping the games most at risk is usually quite easy.

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22 points

Of course DOOM survived. How am I not surprised?

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19 points

What idiots thought CDs were indestructible? They scratched easily and the alumina flaked off from exposure.

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12 points
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Yeah, because it concerned me with my large collection of CDs I can remember warnings decades ago they were estimated to have a seven year life span. I’m pleased to say all mine have well and truly surpassed the seven year mark.

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9 points

The producers knew this well before consumers did. Re-buying degraded media was part of the business model.

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17 points

And this is why I’m currently ripping all my discs of any sort to ISOs. Sadly I’ve already run into 4 unreadable ones.

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I did this with all my PS1 games a while back, ran into a ton of unreadable ones. Managed to read some scratched ones by trying out four different drives, but some sadly fell victim to disk rot ☹️

o7 thanks for the memories I guess!

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13 points
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To be honest I’ve got a bunch of CDs, DVDs and game discs etc. Never stored in a shed or attic and many have rot. They tend to be particular labels, publishers or manufacturers. For example I have a few BBC audio CDs and most of those within a certain range of years have succumbed. I personally wouldn’t store these in a shed but I wouldn’t be surprised if the same thing happened under any conditions. I now use ODEs where feasible or FPGA. My game discs are mostly for looks now.

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