an analysis of historical video game availability shows that only 13% of classic video games are currently commercially available across consoles and time periods, and only 3% of games prior to 1985
pirates keep culture alive ❤️
an analysis of historical video game availability shows that only 13% of classic video games are currently commercially available across consoles and time periods, and only 3% of games prior to 1985
pirates keep culture alive ❤️
Personally, I think IPs should default to public if the holder is just goblin-ing the content. Both whole IPs and individual games. That way they’d be incentivised to keep digital versions available or enjoy watching people get it for free.
@DebatableRaccoon afaik the problem is physical media and that it becomes unavailable/unplayable for several reasons.
@piracy @jonny @GreenCrush @Coeus
Not entirely. It works both ways. Physical media that doesn’t have a digital version has an inherently finite supply but a digital release with no physical release vanishes the moment someone flips the switch.
If we can mandate the IP holder has to always provide a way to acquire the media legally it means there’s always going to be some sort of source. Without crappy DRM, we could make our own physical copies of digital media and the same the other way around.