In a way...
I always keep the games that I like a lot, if they're just okay or not for me - I'll sell them without a doubt.
One thing I dislike about the current age of gaming is that with all the technological progress... we still can't figure out how to preserve games, particularly the ones of this generation. Games are often treated as some product that is going to be forgotten the moment a new "product" comes out. I mean, every game has a ton of patches, DLC and they're necessary, some fix game-breaking bugs. If PSN, Xbox Live or Steam go offline one day, how would one download all the updates and DLC? Then there are some games that go out of sale because of licensing issues or developers disbanding their studios.
For example, Wii is not that old of a console but its online services are disabled, they still allow downloading patches but there were some messages that suggest that feature will be turned off in the future. So, some games would be unplayable unless you did download the patch when it was possible.
Switch is good with that because of the cartridges, 3DS is flawless and most of the games didn't even have any patches for them. PS2 and PS3 games are good with that, too but PS4 generation? Almost every game has a day-one patch, DLC... I actually had to delete some installed games from PS4 because it had no storage left. So, I'll probably need to replace its hard drive to be able to download all the patches for my favorite games, just to be 100% sure those games will remain playable for years to come.
Another example: Final Fantasy XV. It made me download... 60Gb of data, I think.