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JESUS H CHRIST ON A POGO STICK! I played Magic Carpet + Forgotten Worlds, then bought Magic Carpet 2... These were amazing games, I actually finished MC2 too. AMAZING boss fights! Only critique I have was the very close "turok fog syndrome" it suffered from but MC2 improved on that though... I'm sure if someone hacked the script they could make it pre-render a lot more.
OMG BRING IT ON!!!!
being as EA owns them, and they are responsible for the current spore DRM shitstorm, i really can't see them appearing on here, more's the pity :<
as for lucasarts, i doubt that too. they seem to be allergic to making money nowadays, as evidenced by the fact they said they're not going to make another XvT style star wars sim ever again
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Parasitius: Lucasarts and *spit* EA are hardly going to share any potential monetary windfall with a 3rd party site like GoG as they are just too damn greedy. They will no doubt have people keeping an eye on how things go here and see just how popular the site becomes and how much income it's liable to make, and then promptly decide to do their own version of the website to keep 100% of the profit to themselves.

QFT. Publishers have noticed that services like Steam work, but the really major publishers aren't going to try selling through an established distribution system first, they're going to try their hand at setting up a similar system themselves. Why outsource *making money*, right? That's just stupid. If people want to download our games, we'll make them available ourselves and cut out the middle man! How hard could it be?
Gamers can expect nothing but to get shafted in these setups, since publishers are short-sighted and will focus on the bottom line before coming anywhere near to giving you a good gaming experience. They're going to be peddling the same DRM-protected crap at the same price as you'd pay in the store, but without a box or a disc or a way to get a refund. A great deal -- for the publisher, that is.
Old games have it better, since they either never had DRM or they had DRM that's hopelessly outdated and ineffective now, and selling them as new physical copies is no longer worthwhile so there's no threat to the brick and mortar stores. Then there's the fact that the market for these games is smaller, which automatically cuts down on the piracy *if* the games are easily available legally, since they're harder to find for download (and for most people it's a no-brainer to pay for easy access to games you know are good *and* cheap). GOG is a good business model because they've got a relatively easy sell for publishers: "for a pittance we can market the stuff that could be making easy money for you and is just not doing anything now, what have you got to lose?"
Still, keep in mind that for the really big guys it actually looks like more trouble than it's worth to make old stuff available. It's much easier to crap out cookie-cutter new releases through the existing process and make a few megabucks from all the 13-year olds hungering for the latest new thing than it is to dig up the ancient catalogue, sort out the rights, polish the games up for the new generation of hardware and set up distribution all to satisfy the few thousand people who might be interested in a copy. Maybe it could make good money, but why risk it? Just because the customers want it doesn't mean they have to sell it, and having a monopoly through copyright means there's no rush.
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NamelessFragger: I wholeheartedly back this, for Magic Carpet 2: The Netherworlds is my personal fourth greatest game of all time. More people need to experience the joy that is Magic Carpet. Dungeon Keeper was also one of the few RTSs that I actually liked. You also mention Origin, and if they hopped onboard, I could get a bit more acquainted with the Ultima series of RPGs.
Good luck prying such games from the hands on EA, though, particularly due to their insistence on draconian DRM for modern games like Mass Effect and especially Spore (on whose forums which you can't discuss the DRM anymore, and if you do, you get banned to the point where you not only lose access to the forums, but you LOSE ACCESS TO THE GAME!). I remember reading an article with GOG.com having difficulties with having other publishers allow their games to be hosted here due to the DRM-free requirement.

Wow someone else remembers and loves Magic Carpet?? I loved that game! By now it seems completelyh forgotten. When it came out, I remember PC Gamer giving it something like a 96 rating. Ridiculously good games.
I miss Origin too. They had tons of great games.