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CD Projekt - GOG Early Access
CD Projekt's Good Old Games is going to open the doors early to those who have signed on, and a bonus Interplay game is on offer to anyone who buys a game during this Early Access Beta period:
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Oh??? Interplay? Interplay means Shiny. Shiny means…. (clicks link)
SACRIFICE! W000t!!! Oh wait, gotta get with the times… Totally gnarly!! |
I just signed up.
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I signed up a few weeks ago after I read about it over at gameguru.com
An interview I read mentioned they were going to have Redneck Rampage as one of their first games available. I'm hoping they re-release all those Build engine classics. Please God, have them re-release Blood!! |
Looks pretty cool. Maybe I'll finally be able to get Ps:T!
So what is the deal with this site? Is it fully legit (IE they are paying royalties for the games they are selling)? |
It is totally legit. They've basically bought the right to modify and redistribute these games; they have the source code, and have a team of programmers tweaking it to make them run on modern OS's and hardware. It's the same company that brought us The Witcher.
Sounds like a real win-win deal to me -- companies who own the rights to these old gems gets some revenue as royalties, we the gamers get to play them without having to worry about getting them to work, or finding legal copies in the first place, and they get paid for bringing them to us. The only thing that surprises me is that the publishers were ready to come on board -- they've done such a splendid job of shooting themselves in the foot about just about everything lately. |
Awesome!
I guess with what you said though, we won't be seeing Ultima VII on it anytime soon! |
I'm not convinced. That stuff seems to be mostly (if not exclusively) from the mid-90's and up - in other words stuff that is still quite easily available and runnable in a modern 32-bit windows system with some minor tweaking. And also, seems like it's the well known stuff only, no underdogs or hidden gems.
So.. nothing I can't get from huuto.net in physical form. And to me, someone other than the original developer messing around with the code is a bad thing, and that makes me a saaaaaaaad panda. |
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No, I don't. I sort of assumed that as a matter of course. It's very labor-intensive to reverse-engineer code from binaries, so I figured that in order to be cost-effective, they would have to have the source code.
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Hmm, if they have the code, maybe they can recompile some of those old 16-bit programs and make them 32-bit so folks on 64-bit OS's can run them.
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I hope they'll do System Shock 2, that's about the only game I just can't get running on my rig, no matter how hard I try. And I actually like their selection of mid-90's up; earlier games are pretty easy to get running in Dosbox (at least the ones I've tried), and if they go for CD-ROM versions of games they should get an edge over abandonware-sites. With the kind of internet connections people have these days 16,7 meg rips of Blood aren't really that hot… Hope they'll do Thief 1 and 2 as well, they don't go very well with newer vidcard drivers, and the compression of the in-game movies could use a do-over.
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BTW, right now they just have Interplay games, and a handful from Codemasters.
Source: http://gamecorner.pl/gamecorner/1,86…Old_Games.html It includes screens of the service. |
Here's an interview where they talk more about it.
http://www.gamebanshee.com/interviews/goodoldgames1.php Quote:
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