this post was submitted on 07 Feb 2024
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But how are we going to emulate proprietary online services for games relying on them?
Games preservation should be legally enshrined, and require client and server source code to be published if a provider decides to stop running the online services required to play.
Well, if your games is popular enough some may start to do revival project or create these custom servers.
Back in late 2000s I rememver my brother who used to play WoW on private server (which unaffiliated with Blizzard) and mostly these unofficial server are popular for MMOs game back then.
Nowaday, you can have something like OpenSpy which emulates GameSpy servers runs by communities. It is all depend how deeper you want to venture each games.
What you can't preserve is the joy of playing on period correct experience :)
I work with a community that's spent the last 5 years trying to emulate at least one proprietary online game
https://2009scape.org/
This is a fairly lofty and unrealistic goal. Unfortunately, the right for companies to keep their source code private isn't going to go away anytime soon and if they were legally compelled to release binaries, the setup for a modern cloud based online experience is not for the faint of heart.
A more realistic goal would be to say that all products should be usable offline (with exceptions for impossibilities like an instant messenger or something)
If the online servers don't exist anymore, there should be a path to functionality without them. For everything, given the rise of iot especially. If there's a path to functionality without the online service there's a path to preserving the game
Private servers are a thing for lots of big games. When the official servers shutdown or go bad, they tend to turn to emulation
RIP MAG. Never forgotten.
Not that most modern multiplayer games are worth preserving due to their toxic design, but this isn't a huge issue. BF2 servers started back up thanks to Russians loving the shit out of that game. Warcraft 3 is still very much playable online and NOT on battlenet thanks to W3Connect. Fightcade made 90s 2D fighters playable online. Numerous console emulators support netplay.
Preserving an accurate record of human cultural history, isn't going to be very accurate if we only save the good parts.
If you run for office on that platform, you have my vote.