A question about abandonware

General discussion for all topics related to DOS, Windows, Linux, consoles, etc. Anything to do with games.
Post Reply
User avatar
Commander Keen
Member
Member
Posts: 18
Joined: Mon Jul 19, 2004 7:13 am
Location: The B-W-B Megarocket

A question about abandonware

Post by Commander Keen »

well.. what is it exactly and why is it illegal?
Interon

Post by Interon »

Abandonware is old software that is no longer for sale. It is still protected by copyright law despite its lack of commercial availibility. Copyright on a game lasts 50 years after the game's author dies (75 years in the USA).

So if all the people at Apogee died today, you would have to wait until 2054 or 2079 before Duke Nukem 3-D/Stargunner/etc. would be freeware/public domain.

However it may be possible for the fair dealing clause to allow you to play old games no longer for sale.
Roo
Newbie
Newbie
Posts: 1
Joined: Wed Jul 21, 2004 3:20 pm

Post by Roo »

In theory - not sure if this has ever been formally tested - you can legally download abandonware if you have purchased the game in some form and still on the original discs and box. Sites providing true abandonware will usually have a disclaimer to this effect.

The smarter companies abandon their older games as freeware because (1) it is uneconomical to support them and (2) they are unlikely to sell in volume to support endless re-releases (with obvious exceptions, e.g Half-Life and The Sims are, last I checked, the 2 best selling PC games of all time, and popularity is unlikely to die down even after the release of the sequels).
Interon

Post by Interon »

It would be alright if the companies bundled their old DOS games with their new games. All it takes is a folder on the CD-ROM, and put in some ZIP or SFX files.

Apogee did that at one time, buy Duke Nukem 3D and get the old Duke platform games (full versions) for free.
Post Reply