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EA Games Shutting Down By The End Of 2023
September 7, 2023
Crysis 3 for Playstation 3, Xbox 360, Xbox One (backwards compatibility), Steam and EA App
October 10, 2023
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 14 for Xbox 360 and on PlayStation 3
October 30, 2023
Restaurant DASH: Gordon Ramsay for Apple, Google, and Amazon
November 6, 2023
FIFA 18 for PC, Xbox One and PlayStation 4
FIFA 19 for PC, Xbox One and PlayStation 4
FIFA 20 for Nintendo Switch, PC, Xbox One and PlayStation 4
FIFA 21 for Nintendo Switch, PC, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5December 8, 2023
Battlefield 1943 for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360
Battlefield Bad Company for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360
Battlefield Bad Company 2 for PC, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360
Dead Space 2 on PC, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360Dante’s Inferno on PlayStation 3, PlayStation Portable and Xbox 360
Imagine spending hundreds of dollars on fifa in 2021, just for them to shut the servers down 2 years later
The type of people that would spend that much move on to the new game as soon as it’s out anyway
Intresting to see FIFA 18,19,20 and 21 go simultaneously, dose it have to do with the license? Otherwise I would have imagined them going out one year after each other.
Selling online games and then shutting down the service should forfeit the right to interfere with reverse engineering projects. Maybe even require opening up the service specs so reverse engineering wouldn’t be needed.
I think that’s absolutely fair, it will never happen, but I think it should. If you want a game that has online aspects of it and no longer want to host it that’s fine, but then the game should be mandated to go open source and you officially relinquish the copyright. I think that’s a very fair tradeoff, you don’t want to pay for servers anymore which means you don’t think there’s any profit left in it, so prove it by making it FOSS.
and you officially relinquish the copyright. I think that’s a very fair tradeoff
Indeed. Specifically, if a company wants to benefit from society-funded copyright enforcement, then society must get something worthy of the cost. In this case, that’s the cultural enrichment brought by the game. If the game vanishes, then the company hasn’t held up their end of the deal.
“Server” means? Authentication (DRM), Multiplayer or purely online Games? I see Crysis 3 on Steam and Dead Space 2 on PC on this list, so it’s not the later.
I feel like we need to update copyright for modern software. In order to register your copyright, you should store the source code for the software with library of Congress, and the build tool chain the rebuild the code. Then you get your exclusive copyright advantages. And once you’ve left the market, or remove the product from the market, or the copyright has expired, the source code is made public domain.
So in this example shutting down the multiplayer servers would allow the escrow service to release the code to those who want to run multiplayer servers
What online services did dante’s inferno use?
Honestly, given that it’s EA I’m surprised the servers for the PS3/360 games weren’t shut down years ago. Seems like the sort of thing they would have done in the middle of the PS4/Xbox One generation. Also surprised that Dante’s Inferno had a PSP release and that it had online features.
Damn, BF 1943 and BC2… I played both of those quite a lot. Now they are lost forever, never to be revisited (because, realistically, the multiplayer is the main, core experience of a BF game), unlike the 90s/2000s games of my youth that are still available in some form or other.
For me this is kind of a grim reminder that one day BF1 will be on this kind of list… Damn.
There really needs to be a better understanding at a consumer protection level that new entries in a property are not valid absolute substitute products for previous entries (you shouldn’t be able to sunset any online title with no resource to play it again under the reasoning of “well, there’s a newer one, just buy that dude”). Ideally some form of measure should be in place to be able to preserve or recreate the online functionalities of any title (especially if those functionalities are the core of the experience) before its functionalities are taken down.
“It’s old”/“there’s a newer one”/“only x people are playing”/“we might remaster/remake it in the future” shouldn’t be valid excuses to erase any possibility of ever playing a game again, just release a minimum of resources for people to try to get it running again in some basement if they ever want to in the future. People are still playing Resident Evil Outbreak from fucking 20 years ago online on reverse engineered infrastructure, eventually there’s ALWAYS demand.
But then again, right now the tv and film industry are facing a similar situation with streaming only shows getting taken down from their platforms with no alternative, basically being erased forever, and no measures have been taken against that soooo