Fans of classic PC games will be disappointed to learn that the current copyright holder of several does not appear to share their enthusiasm. EA has requested that multiple older games be removed from the GOG storefront.
Electronic Arts currently holds the rights to many classic games, as well as more well-known modern series such as Battlefield and Titanfall. Two such licenses the company holds are Ultima and Syndicate, and today the company exercised its power to remove several games in these series from a third-party platform.
RELATED: Goodwill Auctions Off a $10,000 Atari Game
According to SmollestLight, a member of the GOG.com team, Ultima Underworld 1+2, Syndicate Plus, and Syndicate Wars will all be delisted from the platform "on publisher's request." Those looking to purchase any of the games affected should do so before the delisting date of June 28. After the delisting, the Ultima games will only be available on EA's soon-to-be-renamed Origin platform, as well as only the non-Plus version of Syndicate. Syndicate Wars is nowhere to be seen, though hopefully it can at least be brought to Origin.
EA's move will disappoint fans of classic gaming, archivists, and anti-Digital Rights Management advocates all at once. Classic games can already be difficult to find on modern storefronts, with many only available through spending hundreds of dollars on legitimate copies or piracy. The delistings are especially frustrating given that EA has done nothing with the Syndicate series since the 2012 reboot, and the Ultima series has remained dormant since 2013.
The Ultima series is a staple of 1990s PC gaming, and to see it removed from an easily accessible, DRM-free storefront will frustrate PC gamers looking to relive their childhoods or try the classic games for the first time. Meanwhile, the cyberpunk setting of Syndicate Wars in combination with its tactical gameplay has gained the series a cult following, and the game being pulled without an alternative storefront to purchase it from means it will be difficult to find. All the affected games are currently on a 75% off sale, and will remain available in players' GOG accounts even after being delisted, so current owners have nothing to fear.
With companies like Sony making anti-preservation moves, classic games are becoming increasingly difficult to play on modern devices, or even access at all. EA's delisting will force players to use the Origin storefront to buy the games that are available on it, adding a layer of inconvenient DRM to purchasing and playing these classic games, and fans of Syndicate Wars can only hope EA adds the game to Origin in the near future lest it become completely unpurchaseable.
MORE: After Season 9, Apex Legends Has a Legend Problem
Source: GOG Forums