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CD Projekt RED Group Spring Conference live tomorrow at 5:00 PM GMT

People say it is not spring until you can plant your foot upon twelve daisies. GOG.com has proven otherwise, and you knew it’s spring after eight daisies already: Legend of Grimrock, Treasure Adventure Game, Trine, The Whispered World, Machinarium, Wing Commander 4, Spacechem, and Darwinia. However, as many a sudden change takes place on a spring day, we’re about to reveal another four amazing daisies tomorrow during CD Projekt RED Group Spring Conference.

The harvest of a whole year depends on what you sow in the springtime. And this year, oh boy, we’re into some serious sowing. During CD Projekt RED Group Spring Conference we will:
* tell you what has changed on GOG.com in case you missed it
* offer a sneak peek at future GOG.com releases
* give you a special gift as a big, sweet “thank you” to our users

Remember that those who arrive to the spring first, drink the purest water-- or
Remember that spring won't come from one flower--we need plenty of you to watch the CD Projekt RED Group Spring Conference!
Conference at YT, in case anyone has trouble with the ustream thingy: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLqB_5JRpsk
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DCT: Actually Ultima 4 is only free on certain sites such as GOG, Ultima forever, and two other sites who had permission to host the game from back in the days when Origin systems was still around.
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SLP2000: Well, what he said is that GOG "gave all their users Ultima IV for free once they brought the Ultima games here"

and I said, that it's free for all. I meant "it''s free for all here".
Oh my bad. It read like you were saying that Ultima 4 was free for all as in Public domain which alot of people think, which wasn't the case.
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DCT: Oh my bad. It read like you were saying that Ultima 4 was free for all as in Public domain which alot of people think, which wasn't the case.
RPG fans that go way back will appreciate this: Ultima IV: Quest of the Avatar has been released as freeware online, meaning you can download free and play immediately if you so please.

Word has it creator Richard Garriott aka Lord British fought for this one as it is his favourite entry in the series, and finally succeeded. Ultima IV is regarded as the first truly deep installment in the series, offering up complex puzzles and dialogue, more detailed environments, and a virtue system.
http://www.neoseeker.com/news/15528-ultima-iv-released-as-freeware/
RPG fans that go way back will appreciate this: Ultima IV: Quest of the Avatar has been released as freeware online, meaning you can download free and play immediately if you so please.

Word has it creator Richard Garriott aka Lord British fought for this one as it is his favourite entry in the series, and finally succeeded. Ultima IV is regarded as the first truly deep installment in the series, offering up complex puzzles and dialogue, more detailed environments, and a virtue system.
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Pheace: http://www.neoseeker.com/news/15528-ultima-iv-released-as-freeware/
Yes it was released free but not public domain as it was only made avalable only on select sites.
Observant Dragons and Dragonettes may have noticed that there has been some…disruption in Ultima 4-related projects of late. For example, both the Master System 8 and Phi Psi Software Flash-based remakes of the game have been taken down. Additionally, both Aiera and xu4 have removed their direct download links for the PC version of the game, and Dino has removed his comprehensive listing of other sites that hosted the same download.
Basically, after about fourteen years (since approximately 1997), Electronic Arts is finally cracking down and issuing DMCA notifications to most — not all! — sites that are hosting the PC version of Ultima 4 for download. This move is not being taken well by many, and people are wondering both why EA is wasting time enforcing copyright on an old game like this, and asking “hey, wasn’t it released as freeware?”

Back in the late 1990s, Origin arranged for the PC version of Ultima 4 — the full game — to be released for free on a CD distributed with a particular copy of PC Games/Computer Gaming World.
Late in 1997, Lady Whisper Dragon (who maintains the Worlds of Origin website along with her husband) evidently secured permission from Origin Systems to distribute the version of the game from that CD on her website. The announcement of this was made in a Usenet discussion thread.
Later on in that same thread, a person known as Boomer — AKA Mike McCoy, who at the time was Origin’s “online community manager” — dropped in to clarify, based on a question posed by Fortran Dragon, that the version of the game which was released to Lady Whisper for free download was in fact the PC version of the game, the same binary that had shipped on the PC Games/CGW CD. (Plus the usual bits about it not being for commercial distribution.)
Prior to Lady Whisper posting a version of the game for download, a couple of other Ultima Dragon-run sites were able to secure similar permission to distribute the CD verison of the game. Of these, only Contrapuntal Dragon’s site still exists. Fortran’s Hidalgo Trading Company was the other, but it is no longer online. Lady Whisper was probably the third or fourth person to host a download.
However (and this is an update and correction), I have since determined that Lady Whisper is not hosting the correct version of Ultima 4 for download. Contrapuntal Dragon’s version is the version from the PC Games/CGW CD, which is the version that Origin released. Lady Whisper, however, has posted the version of Ultima 4 that shipped on the Ultima Collection CD for download. The differences between these versions are slight, but a file size comparison tells the tale.
Just prior to these Dragons getting permission to distribute the game, however, was something that Contrapuntal Dragon refers to as the Kickass Debacle. Basically, a gaming site billing itself as Kickass Games (I have no idea if they are related to the present site with that name) was offering Ultima 4 (the version from PC Games/CGW) for download.
Which struck Contrapuntal Dragon as an odd thing since he was aware that various Ultima Dragons had asked Origin for permission to distribute the CD version of the game, and had been refused.
The confrontation with Kickass Games turned ugly and petty, but at the outcome of it Contrapuntal and other UDIC members were informed that they could offer the CD version for download on their websites. After confirming this with Boomer at Origin, Contrapuntal happily set up a download page for the game, and so did a couple of other Dragons (sadly, these other sites no longer appear to be online).

So That Means It’s Free, Right?
Well, yes…and also no. As Contrapuntal Dragon explains at his Ultima 4 download page, the release of the PC Games/CGW version of the game for download was mostly a gesture of goodwill on Origin’s part. And yes, at certain select sites, the game is indeed available for download for free.
So it’s not, as Jazzcat said in this thread at Horizons Tavern, the case that EA “won’t allow anyone to enjoy this classic RPG.” In plain point of fact, they will. But equally, it’s also not the case that “Ultima 4 was released to the public domain in 2001.” That is, sadly, a happy little fiction that the Ultima fandom has invented for itself.
And as Contrapuntal makes clear, EA still holds the copyright to the game, and has ever since the Origin acquisition. The game itself was released in a controlled fashion; the copyright holding was not abandoned at that time.

You Keep Using This Word. I Do Not Think It Means What You Think It Means.
Ultima 4 is available for free in a few select places online; that’s been established. Does that mean it’s “freeware”?
I suppose it depends what you mean by “freeware”, because the meaning of that word has always been a bit fluid, and in fact has shifted a few times over the years. The game is available for free from certain Ultima Dragons but, as Contrapuntal Dragon and Lady Whisper both make clear, that fact does not entitle others to download the game and redistribute it on other websites without the express permission of Origin Systems (or, now, Electronic Arts).
Ultima 4 hasn’t been released in the same way that the id Tech 2 engine has, or in the same way that Bungie released the Marathon games; it’s not GPL or some other flavour of open distribution. Electronic Arts still retains the copyright to the game, and it is still possible to commit piracy in regard to Ultima 4.
http://www.ultimaaiera.com/blog/concerning-ultima-4-or-in-which-i-have-to-be-the-wet-blanket/

Again Freeware =/= Public Domain
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DCT: Again Freeware =/= Public Domain
Ahh, I see. I'll attest I have no clue what the 'Public Domain' really consists of. All I care about is that it's available for free xD
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DCT: Again Freeware =/= Public Domain
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Pheace: Ahh, I see. I'll attest I have no clue what the 'Public Domain' really consists of. All I care about is that it's available for free xD
Okay Public Domain refers to a copyrighted work whose intellectual property rights have expired, been forfeited, or are inapplicable.

In other words it refers to works that are publicly available and can be used,copied and distributed without having to obtain permission or licence to use; For example one can use, copy, reprint, make a production of and or any of the like the works of Edgar Allen Poe since his works are public domain, the formal definition states that it refers to works which are intangible to private ownership or are available for public use.
Just throwing a random idea for pleasing loyal consumers with a huge amount of GOG titles... (I´m personally not one myself, I´ve just a few):

Why not offer a free title for people with 150+ titles or something like that? It wouldn´t make a huge difference to GOG financially as they are just a minority, you please those people, and they keep buying titles. You could just check the top GOG buyers and set the line in whatever place you think is best. It would encourage people with a number near that one to buy more too.

So it´s a win-win situation for GOG ultrafans and GOG itself, although that would leave out the mayority of the other GOG consumers. Anyway, I feel you should do it once after some time, as it´s worse to lose a consumer who buys lots of titles than one or two than just hang on deals and free games. What do you think?
The Witcher, on a system that I can actually smoothly play it on?

Day made.
Where can we get that flaming wolf head wallpaper? :P
The possibility to redeem a digital copy of TW2, for who posses the retail copy, is simply amazing!
Thank you GOG!!!!

I hope this offer will be extended soon to other games (The Witcher: EE, maybe?)
Now comes the internal debate game. To pre-order Botanicula, or not to pre-order Botanicula.

And truly, kudos for getting an Ubisoft game without DRM. A feat for the ages.
How do I get fallout for free I don't get it??? Please help me with this.
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1st: How do I get fallout for free I don't get it??? Please help me with this.
Sorry, you missed it. The game was only free for 48 hours after the press conference.
Well thanks for the Info I will just have to be faster next time
Questions: when does the pre-load for Witcher 2 Enhanced Edition begin? And what's the url for it?
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