this post was submitted on 10 Jul 2023
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Gaming

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

According to the study:

In release - For the purposes of this study, a game is considered to be “in release” if the game, or a version of the game derived from its original release including emulated, modified, or reimplemented versions of the original game is reasonably, readily, and legally available from the game's rightsholder, either in physical or digital format, for a currently produced or supported game platform.

They are expecting copyright holders of a game to indefinitely sell the game. It's not that easy. Something like the 1999 movie Dogma would not qualify as "in release" since you can't buy it or watch it from the copyright holder. You can however buy a DVD version on amazon from mediamaniasales legally.

Overall, the study is expecting studios to support and release classic games for current or supported game platforms. It's a lot of work and it's not reasonable to expect a studio to do. If people want supported classic games then they should create a system that gives money to people trying to do that. We live in a society that requires money and people work to get that money. Expecting people to put in that work for free is pretty silly.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

As far as I'm concerned, if game studios simply had ISOs/ROMs of their abandoned games available to download for a nominal fee that would be acceptable. Heck with the advent of browser based emulators Sony, Nintendo and Sega (plus many early PC game rightsholders) could simply sell access to play their back catalog on their website Netflix-style via these web-based emulators, much like how archive.org handles it

Honestly I think the most achievable solution is an abandonware law that basically permits the free redistribution of any software that isn't available for sale in any standard format for x years. Basically just codify what many companies already practice which is turning a blind eye to abandonware/rom sites distributing the very old games they aren't selling anymore