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Any Abandonware hidden gems you'd like to share with the class?

I'll share two I recently found:

Wizardry Llylgamyn Saga (https://archive.org/details/wiz-ls-pc)

Sword Of Moonlight King's Field Making Tool (https://www.swordofmoonlight.net/) [haven't tested this yet on Win 10 but I think it works]

https://www.myabandonware.com/ for anyone who wants some free games that are in a legal grey area and you don't have to worry about the piracy police getting you.

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  • Escape Velocity: Nova - One of the all time classics of open world games being a space trucker that gets wrapped up in galactic events. Sort of unknown because it came out on Mac at first, then was ported much later, then the studio behind it vanished like a soap bubble. The fan community maintains their own set of download links

    Star Control II / The Ur-Quan Masters - Open world space RPG that's not quite like anything else. Kind of unfair and old-school (take notes, save often, and rotate those save files), but really a wild story of interlocking open pieces, and fantastic character writing. Not quite abandonware, but the devs open sourced it (The Ur-Quan Masters is the open source name). If you're on Linux, it's probably available in your distro's software center.

    Cave Story - Excellent indie story-platformer from just before people started being able to make money off those things. Was originally free, then was given an "upgrade" (made worse) by a company that royally screwed over the original dev. The fan community maintains their own set of download links including a modern engine rewrite that works on modern systems. (If you want to actually pay for this, don't, and instead buy Kero Blaster)

    • Cave Story - Excellent indie story-platformer from just before people started being able to make money off those things. Was originally free, then was given an "upgrade" (made worse) by a company that royally screwed over the original dev. The fan community maintains their own set of download links including a modern engine rewrite that works on modern systems. (If you want to actually pay for this, don't, and instead buy Kero Blaster)

      Damn, I did not know this. I think I bought that version too. I did buy Kero Blaster though.

    • Star control 2 fucks. Highly recommend. Basically a proto Mass Efect, but still better thannit in a few ways (if obviously much less 'cinematic' and character driven).

    • Ambrosia software was still active until maybe several years ago I believe, they were just pushing out mobile puzzle games etc.

  • Beneath A Steel Sky was abandonware for years and years, and is now technically just freeware. it's so free that it's just straight up downloadable on steam. It's a very strange sci-fi adventure game with a tone problem that makes it one of my favorite games ever. It's not the best adventure game, but it doesn't have too much "moon logic" for its puzzles, and the art direction is so grimy in a way that's really lovely and kind of unique compared to most dystopian fiction. I feel like it'd be best to just point you to it to go experience it than detail it too much, but you are a guy forcibly brought in to a dystopian city after your village is attacked, and the rest of the game is a kind of descent into this highly industrialized, capitalistic fascist dystopia. It's neat.

    It has a sequel called Beyond A Steel Sky. It's pretty solid, but it's also, imo, a completely different game. There is exactly one level that evokes the aesthetics and sensibilities of the original, and it's got these "HEY REMEMBER THE FIRST GAME?" bits bolted into the story, but you could excise all of it and lose nothing, so it's hard to recommend it as a followup-in-spirit, but it's a solid sci-fi adventure game with a lot of modern amenities (read: no soft locks, no impossibly obtuse puzzles, regular autosaving), and it has interesting stuff to say along the way so vOv I'd recommend it, even though it isn't necessarily abandonware

21 comments