• ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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      1 day ago

      StopKillingGames is also about keeping games with always online DRM (even present in many singleplayer games today) from rendering it completely unplayable, which would also determine if it could even be sold on GoG in the future.

      All of GoG’s current catalog is only possible because the trend of always online DRM wasn’t a thing yet, but going forward, we’ll need SKG to ensure GoG is able to preserve newer games as they become old. If GoG cares about preserving games, then SKG couldn’t get more in their wheelhouse. Yet they ghosted the organizer for it.

      • dukemirage@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        Even on Steam I‘ve never bought a game with always online DRM. Is that really still a thing?

        • ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net
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          2 hours ago

          Yes, many games implement that. More famously The Crew (which was mostly a singleplayer game with a large campaign with some multiplayer tacked on) became completely unplayable after Ubisoft shut down the multiplayer portion of the game due to always online DRM. They only later patched the game to become playable in singleplayer again after the extreme backlash from the SKG campaign, which focused on The Crew as an example.

          There are many more singeplayer games either already killed, or currently at-risk of being destroyed. SKG keeps an up to date list of them here: https://stopkillinggames.wiki.gg/wiki/Dead_game_list

      • dukemirage@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        And in principle I’m fine with an online store that only sells conventional, offline singleplayer games to not give a pickle about service games.

        • radiouser@crazypeople.online
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          1 day ago

          Good to know but I’m not sure how that’s relevant to the principle originally being discussed.

          The movement is about the legal right to keep what you paid for *period*. If you’re “fine” with publishers killing service games today, you’re just signaling to the industry that you’ll be fine with them adding mandatory online check-ins to your favorite single-player games tomorrow.

          Apathy toward a principle usually ends with losing the privilege you thought was safe… Food for thought.

        • ampersandrew@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          There are a number of old LAN games there too. It’s basically the only place I can feasibly shop for multiplayer shooters at the moment. The sad part is that I think the newest one is Crysis Wars, from 2008.

          • dukemirage@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Of course, and many singleplayer games had multiplayer modes, that stuff wasn’t necessarily separated.

            • ampersandrew@lemmy.world
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              1 day ago

              For a number of these, they’re often games that had GameSpy servers or otherwise the online multiplayer portion of it was shut down, yet the game and multiplayer remain playable, and that’s what SKG is about.