A few samples from my physical game collection:
The attachment Win9x_games.jpg is no longer available
Not all of these will be played on this specific system (e.g. NFS3 will look better on my Voodoo 3 rig) but they are all from the Win9x era of gaming. I already have most of these in digital form (via GOG, Steam etc.) but it's still good to have physical copies as backup. On average, each of these games cost me about 5 EUR, some a bit more, some slightly less. They are all budget re-releases so this isn't much of a surprise. I had some of them for 15+ years (e.g. the Blizzard stuff) while others are fairly recent pickups. Anyhow, here's a short review of some of these:
Need for Speed III
This one comes with the Banshee patch on the disc (separate install) but not the Voodoo 3 patch. Of course, you can download the latter from the internet if needed, and get proper fog effects by combining the two as per these instructions.
Tomb Raider 1&2
The first game in this bundle is completely missing the CD audio tracks, which is unforgivable. Fortunately, you can patch them back in with a bit of effort, but it's still crazy that they shipped the disc in such a state. The second game is fine, and all the audio tracks are accounted for.
Thief II
This seems to be a later re-release, pressed on a single DVD instead of multiple CDs. It has a modernized installer which works without issues on WinXP and Win7, while still running fine under Win9x. This release is pre-patched to version 1.18.
Unreal Anthology
This box appears to have suffered some liquid damage at the hands of its previous owner. I gave it a thorough cleaning, but the paper insert was already ripped, so I taped it together as best I could. Despite mentioning Win7 and Vista on the box, this compilation can actually be installed on Win9x. The main autorun file won't work, spewing a kernel error, but if you simply run setup.exe from the Disk1 folder, you're good to go. I also like the inclusion of the soundtrack on a standard audio CD. Unreal's music remains superb to this day.
P.S.
I kinda stopped caring about physical games when Steam came around, but I regret that now, since you can no longer run it on WinXP. GOG is my preferred solution nowadays, since it's completely DRM-free, and because it allows you to back up the offline installers to local storage. That said, it does feel nice to have some physical copies at hand, even if they are budget releases. 😀