GOG’s New Plan To Weaponize Its Community’s Wishlist Of Games To Pressure IP Holders
GOG’s New Plan To Weaponize Its Community’s Wishlist Of Games To Pressure IP Holders
GOG’s New Plan To Weaponize Its Community’s Wishlist Of Games To Pressure IP Holders
I’ll give the folks over at Good Old Games (GOG) credit: they’re certainly doing what they said they were going to do. We’ve been talking about GOG a fair amount lately, mainly since the platform announced it was pivoting back to focus on its initial raison d’etre: bringing retro, DRM-free games back to a public storefront for gamers to legitimately purchase. GOG stated that it was doing this in part in order to get into the business of video game preservation, a prospect that everyone knew would be tested largely due to fights and/or confusion over IP rights held by publishers, studios, and god knows who else.
No One Lives Forever has disappeared off the face of the earth and I really enjoyed it back in the day. I wish GOG sucess in getting it back into circulation.
I happen to have the original CDs and might be of help in preservation efforts. Not quite sure where I misplaced them, but I just had NOLF 2 in my hands.