The games on RGB Classic Games that are affected by this are:
- Arcy 2
- Hoosier City
- Pickle Wars
- Robomaze II
- Robomaze III
- Thor's Hammer (possibly)
Their version of Thor's Hammer is already on the site. As for the other games, we had a discussion with DOSGuy about it a while ago:Flaose wrote:MVP Software has recently (I think) released many of their old games for free download. You can see the whole list at http://pub.mvpsoft.com/attic/registered/.
The games on RGB Classic Games that are affected by this are:
- Arcy 2
- Hoosier City
- Pickle Wars
- Robomaze II
- Robomaze III
- Thor's Hammer (possibly)
To sum up, MVP Software has the right to distribute the games for free, however third parties are not allowed to freely redistribute the games (with the exception of Thor's Hammer which was liberated at DOSGuy's request in the first place) unless permission is obtained from copyright holders. I'm not sure on the status of Robomaze games, but I assume DOSGuy investigated into this matter, and the decision to include the full versions on the site is up to him.DOSGuy wrote:I assume that MVP has a permanent license to distribute those games, and Dave Snyder (who I believe was the sole proprietor of MVP) probably assumed that he had the right to set the price to $0 since they weren't selling any more. Maybe he did, but the copyright on at least some of those games could belong to the developers, and they may not have been consulted. Assuming that MVP owns the distribution rights, but not the copyright on those games, they may be allowed to give them away, but they can't declare them freeware. That's one of those "gratis versus libre" distinctions. Basically, the games may have no price (gratis, or "free as in free beer"), but I don't know if MVP has the right to say that the games can be freely distributed (libre, or "free as in free speech"). From a legal perspective, it may boil down to whether the developers granted MVP a non-transferable license to distribute their games, or if they granted MVP all rights to distribution, which would empower MVP to sell, transfer or extend their distribution rights to anyone or everyone else. Since MVP says that you can't redistribute those games "without our written permission", that suggests that they have the right to grant such permission, but I'm not sure if they do. If I'm right that MVP doesn't own the copyright on some or all of those games, that would explain why Redwood Games continues to sell a game that their distributor is giving away for free.
I always intended to get the answers to those questions, until I found out that Dave Snyder died in 2007, shortly after the last time I was in contact with him. I'm assuming, at this point, that it would be easier and better to contact the developers, but I've just never gotten around to it. Perhaps that will finally happen this weekend.
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Okay, here's a list of who the copyright is listed as for each of the games that they're giving away.So it looks like we can say that MVP Software owns Rapid Response and Robomaze II and III. Interestingly the developer, Wetware, owns Hoosier City. Apparently Keith Laverty negotiated a different deal with MVP for that game.
Arcy 2 None found Crusade in Space Copyright 1994 Glacier Edge Technology GameBuilder Pro Copyright 1991, 1993 Ed Simpson Hoosier City Copyright 1992 Wetware Jack Flash Copyright 1994 Caps Software King Arthur's K.O.R.T. Copyright 1994 Brandon McMullen Pickle Wars Copyright 1993 Karen Crowther Rapid Response Copyright 1992 MVP Software Robomaze II Copyright 1991 MVP Software Robomaze III Copyright 1991 MVP Software Thor's Hammer Copyright 1995 Escape Programming, LLC
I can't find a copyright declaration anywhere in Arcy 2, even in the license file! MVP is clearly the distributor, but I can't tell who owns the game. For what it's worth, it's made by the same company as Jack Flash, which is owned by developer Caps Software.
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Escape Programming declared Thor's Hammer freeware upon my request on 16 July 2009 and, interestingly, MVP seems to have put the registered version on their website on 3 July 2009. I know that Brian Cox spoke with MVP (presumably to David Snyder's son Chris) before declaring the game freeware, so that might be why they did it.
The information found on the official Blood website confirms that this was a legit, albeit magazine-only release:Litude wrote:Yeah I know about that, but I've yet to find any source mentioning any beta of Blood being leaked (plenty of sources regarding the alpha leak of course) so I'm wondering if it was actually a legit release but the developer who put together the release just forgot to remove the "DO NOT DISTRIBUTE" disclaimer from the start-up screen. Been looking through scene releases from 1997 and found no mention of a leaked beta either (though I realize that not all leaked releases were released through the scene).
EDIT: Also if it was leaked, why would it only include the first three levels?
The magazine version that you have is only available from magazine CDs. The magazine version is a very early build of Blood, and it only has 3 levels. The full shareware has 8 levels, and the full registered Blood has 42 levels and 4 episodes! Also, the problems that are in the Magazine demo have been fully addressed in the latest shareware version of Blood ( version 1.02 ). Download a copy of the shareware from HERE, or buy the CD copy in the stores for $9.95 that includes cinematic Softimage® rendered cutscenes, a music video from Type O Negative, and a coupon for $10 off the full registered version of Blood! [source]
Thanks to Hallfiry's catalogue yet again, another early version of the game was found on this Interactive Entertainment CD (CD image @ archive.org). The internal version number is 1.020, and the date stamp on the game executable is from Sep 8, 1995. I've repacked the files and uploaded it here: greed102.zipMrFlibble wrote:Thanks to Hallfiry's wonderful catalogue version 1.0 of In Pursuit of Greed demo was found on this CD. The files have been unpacked by the magazine editors (who also added their own installer). There might have been an installer originally, since Channel 7 used installers for both the later versions of In Pursuit of Greed and Iron Seed shareware.
I have repacked the files and uploaded the ZIP here: greed.zip
Thanks to Hallfiry's catalogue I've found what seems to be original files of that distribution on this CD. The main files pack is q105beta.exe, and beta5e.exe is a small bug fix for it. The fix is actually available from id Software FTP: beta5a.exe.Sep 13, 1996 - There is a BETA distribution of 1.05 up on our ftp site.
ftp://ftp.idsoftware.com/idstuff/unsup/q105beta.exe
It includes quake.exe winded.exe progs.dat, and a zip of the latest .qc files. Back up your current version before messing with this, in case something is broken.
There is new source code available. ftp://ftp.idsoftware.com//idstuff/source/qutils.zip has win-32 compiled versions and VC++ projects for all of the quake command line utilities. The qbsp/light/vis programs have not been tested all that well here, because we still use a dec alpha running unix for most of our work, but it has been converted from doubles to floats, which should reduce the memory requirements quite a bit (and possibly cause more numeric instabilities...).
I also uploaded the DOOM ipxsetup / sersetup source code, which we haven't had on our ftp site before.
We are going to begin internal testing of a 1.05 Quake release tomorrow. When we upload for general release, we will also upload the current .qc source. The old qcc.tar.gz file is still present on the ftp site for the original .qc files for now. [source]
That needs to be checked, thanks for reporting!Flaose wrote:edit: Actually, it appears that the v2.0 entry is just mislabelled as Shareware, it is the Registered Version. Sorry about that.