Posted December 01, 2012
timppu: (unless you feel running them through an emulator called DOSBox is "tweaking". The original game files are still exactly the same as back then).
Rincewind81: Of course this is tweaking. What happens if nobody is able and interested in Dosbox Development anymore? If there is absolutely no virtualized/emulated environment available, or you don't have an old system around, then yes, obviously you can't run GOG games anymore. That is still a far cry from Pheace's claim that your original, backed-up GOG games can't be played in the future, period.
Steam games, on the other hand... ;) no, you most probably will not be able to play the original games in the future, even if you tried to run them on an emulated or virtualized Windows environment (and even if Steam/Valve were still around then). Well ok, unless Valve keeps updating all the Steam games to run on all future Windows versions, OR keep supporting all legacy Windows versions with all their future Steam client versions (which they won't, because they've done the opposite already).
timppu: At the same time though, the older Steam-dependant games will refuse to work, even if you have an emulator or a virtualized environment for the games.
grviper: By that time they will be cracked and repackaged a dozen times, the same way today you can't find some old games with their protection intact. So you just proved my point: only the DRM-free versions will be playable in the future, including Steam games where the DRM has been removed afterwards.
I can today still play the same DOS games I bought two decades ago, without pirating or re-purchasing them. Yay for them being DRM-free! :)
Post edited December 01, 2012 by timppu