I believe that physical media will always have the best quality compared to streaming from an online service, and that’s why I collected so many Blu-ray and DVD discs. Eventually, though, I switched to watching my media on Plex instead, and I won’t go back.

I Used to Have a Massive Physical Media Library

Before the age of streaming everything, physical media was my scene. I was a huge physical media collector, andSteelBookswere my all-time favorite to buy. During the Infinity Saga portion of Marvel movies, I would buy the SteelBook of all movies as soon as they released.

This hobby was expensive, but I really loved it. Displaying the SteelBook cases on my shelf next to my POP! figurines were part of the appeal. Plus, I could watch the movies whenever I wanted. I loved the hobby.

The Avengers Infinity War Collectors Edition Steelbook Blu-ray.

I Got Tired of Having to Re-Buy DVDs and Blu-rays When They Got Damaged

Collecting physical media has its drawbacks, though:damaged movies. While Blu-ray discs were more resilient to scratches than DVDs, both could potentially be damaged (or lost) through normal use.

This became annoying to me, and I started trying to figure out how I could stop getting damaged discs. It wasn’t often, but I definitely had to re-buy multiple movies because the discs either got lost or damaged.

Scratched cd or dvd close up.

I hated doing this because it got expensive, but streaming wasn’t a viable option for movies and buying both the digital and physical copies of the movie was even more annoying—especially because there wasn’t a great way to unify movie purchases across platforms.

Making Backups and Copies Got Annoying

I startedripping movies as ISO filesto my desktop because this allowed me to back up movies and re-make discs if they got damaged. This worked, but having tore-burn a DVDwas annoying as I’d have to keep blank discs around and then label them manually.

It is a viable method for preserving movies, however. When I was younger, my parents used this method to keep us kids from damaging movies. We’d buy a new DVD, and my dad would rip it to the computer and burn a DVD for us to use. If we damaged it, he’d burn another. It was cheaper and easier than re-buying movies that we kept destroying.

The back of a DVD.

Making new copies works, but isn’t ideal. There’s still a cost associated, and you still have to use the physical media to watch the movie. That’s when I learned aboutPlex, and Plex completely changed the game for me.

Plex Unified My Entire Media Collection and Gave Me Access to It Everywhere

After discovering Plex, my family took all the DVDs and Blu-rays that we had ripped to the computer and converted the ISO files to traditional movie files (typicallyMKV format). These files were then moved to our Synology DS416j NAS and a Plex server was started.

With Plex, our family could thenwatch all of these movies on any TV, even if we didn’t have a Blu-ray player in that room. This opened up new doors for us, as we then started to damage discs less, and movies stopped getting lost.

Plex app icon on an Apple TV

While building our Plex library still required manuallyripping the moviesas we purchased them, it was a one-and-done thing. There would be no burning of DVDs and no more physical media. Just insert the DVD or Blu-ray disc, rip as MKV, and then store on the shelf.

Myphysical media librarybecame a display piece only after it was ripped, and that’s exactly what I wanted it to be. It was something to look at and enjoy, not something to use.

Three smartphones running the redesigned Plex mobile app.

Plus, with Plex, I was able to enjoy my movies on not just on my TV, but also on my phone, computer, Xbox, PlayStation, and any other internet-connected device. I could even watch my movies at a friend’s house without bringing a Blu-ray over and then forgetting it in their Blu-ray player (which happened far more than I’d like to admit).

Plex simply transformed how I consumed content, and I couldn’t imagine living without Plex now. TV shows are another area that Plex revolutionized. My family loves theFull Houseseries, and we had it on DVD. The problem is, each season was spanned across multiple DVDs, so we’d constantly be changing out DVDs and trying to figure out which disc a specific episode was on.

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With Plex, the process was completely streamlined as we could browse the entire series at once, and pick an episode from season one, then jump to season five, and back to season one if we wanted to—all without changing the disc one time.

Lifetime Plex Pass

you may unlock all of Plex’s best features without a recurring subscription with a lifetime Plex Pass.

Not sure how to set up a Plex server? It’s actually pretty easy, and you can use almost any modern hardware to do it. From a Raspberry Pi to a dedicated server, it’s simple toget Plex up and runningon whatever hardware you have.

Once Plex is running, you can even set it up to allow you toaccess your media outside your local network. The steps for that are also pretty straightforward, letting you watch your movies and TV shows from anywhere.