GOG Is Launching A Game Preservation Program

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Great games often find themselves cast aside by developers and abandoned for years until a technological leap makes it virtually impossible to play them without putting in some serious work.

This is not necessarily a malicious practice. The linear passage of time dictates that developers move on to new projects, budgets are reallocated from upkeep to new development, studios close, and a new OS version emerges. Suddenly, the game is dead.

After firmly establishing itself as a DRM-free alternative to Steam for gaming classics, the folks at GOG.com have escalated their war on game obsolescence. This is the birth of the GOG Preservation Program.

The core message of the GOG Preservation Program is to keep classics working on modern computers without inconveniencing the player while also providing accessible tech support to help smooth over any problems.

Looking at the GOG Preservation Program page, it becomes clear that the initiative takes a two-pronged approach.

Part of the effort is directed at reviving classic titles from the grave after they have become unplayable.

The other half is directed at maintaining games that are still functional but no longer supported by the original developers, making sure the game stays playable no matter what.

The GOG team involved in the preservation effort explains the revival process of the original Resident Evil trilogy in a blog post.

According to the preservation log, the game received major improvements to the rendering, audio, and controls, while also fixing legacy bugs and introducing modern features such as V-Sync and cloud saves.

A look at the GOG Preservation Program catalog shows a strong mix of oldies and modern classics, such as Obsidian masterpiece (and eternal envy of Bethesda) Fallout: New Vegas.

When you open a Preservation Program game's page, such as SimCity 2000, a neat tab below the specs details what changes GOG has made since taking over the game.

The most common entries are stability fixes for Windows 10 and 11, and the introduction of cloud saves.

The death of media has become a contentious issue in courts lately.

A pair of Californian gamers is suing Ubisoft for taking the racing game The Crew offline without providing a way to play locally.

Meanwhile, publishing and music conglomerates have been waging war against the Internet Archive as the project tries to keep books, records, and games from disappearing forever.

Efforts like the GOG Preservation Program are often the last line of defense to keep classic games alive, especially as today's computers become increasingly less compatible with the physical media these games shipped in originally.

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Related Forum: PC Gaming Forum

Source: https://www.dualshockers.com/gog-launching-game-preservation-program/

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