| ▲ | sublinear 6 hours ago | |
I question how much of this discussion is really being driven by gamers. Those who wanted change made it happen. There are indie games and remakes without these restrictions. Most of classic gaming preservation has been successful with its goals apart from some legal gray areas and chasing rarities. These discussions then fixate on the cutoff year for classic gaming and whether everything beyond that is even worth saving. The conclusion is always the same. Nobody really cares about the slop. All that remains to discuss is politics. That's always the most vocal part drowning out everyone else. Who keeps banging this drum? | ||
| ▲ | pitched 6 hours ago | parent [-] | |
This is the exact kind of cause that triggers the social media algorithms. Part nostalgia, part underdog battle, and no problematic elements. | ||