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GOG's Preservation Program Is the DRM-Free Store Refocusing On the Classics
jeudi 14 novembre 2024, 00:20 , par Slashdot
GOG is not shifting its mission of providing a DRM-free alternative to Steam, Epic, and other PC storefronts, at least not entirely. But it is demonstrably excited about a new focus that ties back to its original name, inspired in some part by its work on Alpha Protocol. 'We think we can significantly impact the classics industry by focusing our resources on it and creating superior products,' writes Arthur Dejardin, head of sales and marketing at GOG. 'If we wanted to spread the DRM-free gospel by focusing on getting new AAA games on GOG instead, we would make little progress with the same amount of effort and money (we've been trying various versions of that for the last 5 years).' What kind of games? Scanning the list of Good Old Games, most of them are, by all accounts, both good and old. Personally, I'm glad to see the Jagged Alliance games, System Shock 2, Warcraft I & II, Dungeon Keeper Gold and Theme Park, SimCity 3000 Unlimited, and the Wing Commander series (particularly, personally, Privateer). Most of them are, understandably, Windows-only, though Mac support extends to 34 titles so far, and Linux may pick up many more through Proton compatibility, beyond the 19 native titles to date. [I]f you see the shiny foil-ish GOG badge on a game, it's an assurance that GOG has done all it can to bring forward a classic title. It's important work, too. 'Preserving' games doesn't just mean locking a stable media in a vault, but keeping games accessible, and playable. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://games.slashdot.org/story/24/11/13/2139229/gogs-preservation-program-is-the-drm-free-store-re...
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