An update on Steam / GOG changes for OpenTTD

(openttd.org)

204 points | by jandeboevrie 3 hours ago

18 comments

  • aeturnum 1 hour ago
    I don't have much to add except to say that I think this is a stand-out example of how companies and preservationists should work together and not against each other. The childish folks who are upset about this aren't familiar with the realties of either open source games perseveration nor the realities of being an IP holder. This is as close as we have gotten to the Good Place. I wish Atari luck on the re-release and I hope that anyone who's upset about it reflects on why they are upset.
    • superxpro12 1 hour ago
      This is about as much as you can hope for tbh. More than a fair compromise.

      Society has become quite 'entitled' to 'free' things. As popular as they are, torrents and free streams and emulation and clones of games in an open source lib are all stealing something. I know thats an unpopular thing to say but it a fact.

      Now, those rights violations viewed in a larger context may change one's opinion on the whole, and I'm not jumping into that debate today.

      Atari did a cool thing. That's rare in the corporate world today. Give praise where it's deserved.

      • AuthAuth 25 minutes ago
        Are they really stealing it though? They only brought the IP 30 years later they didnt make it or put any work towards it. The openTTD community has easily done 100x the work to extend the game.
    • bombcar 46 minutes ago
      I think it's interesting to look at your opinion (not you particularly, but everyone) and see if it would have been different if instead of "Atari" it was "Chris Sawyer".

      If it would have been, then there's probably an inconsistency somewhere.

      • zem 33 minutes ago
        I don't think it's inconsistent to think that a person's right to their IP is worthy of respect but a faceless corporation's isn't. you can disagree, but it's not an inconsistency.
        • bombcar 28 minutes ago
          It is somewhat, because you then have to say you respect their right to the IP, but don't respect their ability to sell said right.

          You can make that argument, but you need to actually do so and not just leave it unsaid.

          • OkayPhysicist 5 minutes ago
            The distinction is that people respect people who make things they like. That's good, and noble: no matter what kind of topsy-turvy economic system you live under, making stuff is a valuable (not always the most valuable, but valuable nonetheless) skill, because people need and want stuff.

            People who merely buy stuff to extract rent from it are, at best, a necessary evil. There's nothing admirable in rentseeking behavior. It's just playing the game.

            If we're hanging around a campfire in the paleolithic, the guy who figured out how to make beer is going to be everyone's best friend. The guy who won't let anybody drink from the stream because it's "his" is liable to meet an unfortunate end.

          • zem 21 minutes ago
            I think the difference in sentiment is between "I created this and I would like to continue deriving benefit from it" versus "we bought this and we would like it to retain its value". again this is not about the legal difference, just how people personally feel about it.
  • legitster 2 hours ago
    As a sidenote, this whole situation implies just how important platforms are.

    Nothing about OpenTTD has changed. You can literally just go download it off their website for free - same as it was 20 years ago. And you can add it to your Steam library just fine. It's only been on the Steam store for 5 of those years.

    But the open internet is dead now and just being "de-merchandised" from a platform feels like being relegated to the dark web (maybe something the open source community doesn't quite fully appreciate).

    • iso1631 2 hours ago
      I don't remember how I first heard about slashdot, but I know I discovered debian and enlightenment through it, and I would assume I discovered openttd through it.

      Perhaps some comment on a forum or usenet somwhere. Or perhaps on a compuserve group. Or maybe someone else at school.

    • johnnyanmac 1 hour ago
      That's why we need to reel in these platforms. The mobile ones are slowly starting to relent, but that's only the beginning.
    • lstodd 2 hours ago
      Open internet is dead only to those that don't take the effort to discover. Otherwise it's still as open as it always was.

      Since there was an internet to speak of, there always were and still are vast amounts of people unaware of stuff that exists, limited by no "platforms" but only by their own lack of desire.

      • dryarzeg 2 hours ago
        That is true to some extent. However, let me ask you one simple question: how would you try to search for something if you are not aware of it's existence? In other words, how people that are not aware of existence of open-source projects (such as OpenTTD) are supposed to discover them if they're not searching for them on purpose (which is impossible given that they have no clue about their existence)?

        Of course there will be some ways like social media or something else. But that question is what seems to worry many people in our case, in my humble opinion. Remember that most of the planet's population is not even aware of existence of open-source projects and open-source concept itself. So how are they supposed to discover it if they don't know about it? When it's present on platforms like Steam and GOG, it helps to spread the word, but when it's not... Well, I guess that seems to be a problem for some people.

        • nimih 1 hour ago
          > So how are they supposed to discover it if they don't know about it?

          Presumably, through social interaction with others in the communities they are a part of. That's how I heard about OpenTTD in the early 00s, at least.

        • zer00eyz 2 hours ago
          > In other words, how people that are not aware of existence of open-source projects (such as OpenTTD) are supposed to discover them if they're not searching for them on purpose (which is impossible given that they have no clue about their existence)?

          This question tickles me. In the before time, something would be so good you were compelled to tell someone about it.

          Sriracha, Costco are brands you likely know that dont advertise, and somehow got popular. In the 90's there were bands that were massively popular with little to no air play, and less promotion (Fugazi is a great example).

          • autoexec 1 hour ago
            > Sriracha, Costco are brands you likely know that dont advertise

            This was a Costco ad https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7i5CQVfmx-0

          • starkparker 2 hours ago
            probably a little telling that you don't seem to know the name of the sriracha brand you're referring to that does zero-dollar advertising
            • whstl 1 hour ago
              Does it matter? People just look for the bottle with a rooster anyway.
              • zer00eyz 41 minutes ago
                Ahh the old days before Huy Fong lost the plot.

                My introduction to their Sriracha was in 1994, when the Puerto Rican cook at the Italian restaurant I worked at sent me to Stop and Shop for the "rooster".

                Till hosing their relationship with Underwood Ranch (their sole provider of chili's) this was the only product in the marketplace (much like ketchup was always Heinz for a time). Absolute market dominance wrecked over not honoring your handshake deal with your ONLY supplier.

                The latest batches by them are green, and no one wants them. The underwood version of the product is taking over --- it has a giant dragon on the bottle now, and what I look for now rather than the rooster.

        • shevy-java 1 hour ago
          Right. This is a chicken-egg problem. We also need a replacement for google search; Google ruined it, on purpose. We are being made blind (not totally blind, but dumber, and then blind).
      • repeekad 2 hours ago
        Technology Connections referred to this as “algorithmic complacency”, young people don’t like Bluesky because they have to decide for themselves what content to follow instead of a default algorithm feed
      • nazgulsenpai 2 hours ago
        I use a similar argument to those who say that gaming is dead. Sure, if you're waiting for $AAA_DEVELOPER to change, it's probably dead, but you don't even have to look that far to find amazing games everywhere in indie and AA.
        • polothesecond 55 minutes ago
          Sadly indie developers are only just starting get into my preferred genre. I am excited to see how a number of upcoming titles turn out, but for the time I’m stuck waiting for $AAA_DEVELOPER to change.

          I’ve had half the mind to just try my own hand at game dev again.

        • johnnyanmac 1 hour ago
          Gaming feels dead to devs these days. But I know that's not what gamers care about.
      • jl6 19 minutes ago
        The open internet is a whisper in a screaming crowd. Yes, it’s technically still there.
      • throwaway0q5347 2 hours ago
        > limited by no "platforms" but only by their own lack of desire.

        Or Google's low ranking of their content

        • lstodd 2 hours ago
          I don't even.

          Relying on third-party ranking of whatever is a clear indicator of lack of effort.

          • StableAlkyne 2 hours ago
            Short of developing psychic abilities, how would you then address the discoverability problem without relying on a third party?

            Forums, search engines, social media, and link aggregators are all third parties with their own ranking. Nobody outside of a handful of small-web hobbyists have put a "cool links" section into a website since 1997.

            • BowBun 1 hour ago
              This is classic engineering missing the forest for the trees.

              The answer to your question is: same as we always did before! Do you talk to friends? Colleagues? Family? You definitely chat with us here on HN. All of these people share things with you constantly.

              There's a funny obsession in tech circles to gather all the information they can as quick as possible. I much prefer to optimize for the quality of information I'm ingesting.

            • skydhash 2 hours ago
              There’s always a relationship aspect in discoverability. Unless the set is small, there will always be intermediary nodes in that graph that will connect consumers and producers. But there’s no need for it to be a mega tech company. Radio DJs help with discovering musics. Books club can help with recommending books.
              • johnnyanmac 1 hour ago
                Doesn't need to be, but most traffic is driven by search. I reckon 2nd most common is influencers, and I don't know if that's an upgrade (even easier to buy out).
      • itsdesmond 2 hours ago
        This is as good an argument as saying that Americans with unhealthy diets bear sole responsibility, ignoring the massive corporate efforts to convince them of the healthfulness of highly processed foods. While, obviously, individuals have ultimate responsibility for their actions, ignoring the concerted efforts to influence those actions through psychology, marketing/ads, paid “experts”, paid influencers and celebrities, lobbies, blah blah et cetera.

        When I started using the internet, if I asked someone what the internet was I was unlikely to get any answer at all. It was new. I had to define it for myself. Ask a 6 year old what the internet is. It’s YouTube. TikTok. Roblox. Experiences that are designed to keep them there. It is obviously more difficult for an individual to engage with the open web than it ever has been (for those with access at all).

        • Barrin92 18 minutes ago
          >ignoring the concerted efforts to influence those actions

          Ignorance isn't the point. The issue is that it's your responsibility to stop them. the buck always stops at "I". Are they just going to stop themselves? Is your neighbor going to stop them for you? If so, why should she if you don't?

          As Kant said, enlightenment is getting out of your self inflicted tutelage. When is it self inflicted? When you have the reason but lack the courage to act without direction from someone else.

          Yes, there's influencers and lobbies but the solutions are still one search away. Even Google doesn't hide the alternatives from you. And sure we can force feed every American veggies and force install linux on their computers but that'd defeat the point.

        • skydhash 2 hours ago
          > It is obviously more difficult for an individual to engage with the open web than it ever has been (for those with access at all).

          It’s very easy. If you’re a producer, you maintain a separate presence outside the walled platforms. If you’re a consumer, you look outside the walled platform for content.

          • itsdesmond 1 hour ago
            Hey maybe I’m wrong, overthinking it. Maybe the problem is that simple. Maybe you can only see things simply. There’s simply no way to tell.
          • johnnyanmac 1 hour ago
            >It’s very easy. If you’re a producer, you maintain a separate presence outside the walled platforms.

            I want to try one day. Steam's pricing parity adds friction to that, though. I can't reward people for venturing to a place where they own their software, and that seems to be the only real way to move many.

    • devnotes77 2 hours ago
      [dead]
  • 999900000999 2 hours ago
    This is beyond reasonable.

    You can still download it for free outside of Steam.

    If I make a Sonic fan game and Sega is like, you can keep it online, but just not on Steam, that’s nice.

    In this situation you still have the option of playing it on Steam for a modest price

    The alternative is the Nintendo route…

    • eykanal 2 hours ago
      Fully agree, and glad you posted this. Atari has no responsibility to the open source community, and indeed has every reason to push back against this effort. That they're willing to discuss things at all, and that they agree to help support the effort, is frankly astonishing and extremely kind-hearted.
      • 20k 1 hour ago
        At the same time, the open source community has absolutely no responsibility to make Atari profits here either. The outcome here is simply that open source is getting screwed over

        It isn't kind hearted. Them trying to shut down openttd would lead to a gigantic clusterfuck that would hurt their sales. This is them trying to remove a direct competitor to them releasing a new game as much as possible, without generating community backlash - to maximise profits

        These companies are not our friends

        • entropicdrifter 16 minutes ago
          And yet, they're also directly supporting the developers of OpenTTD via a donation and not giving them any legal harassment.

          This is, at worst, a morally-neutral compromise that's far better than any worst-case scenario

      • singpolyma3 1 hour ago
        "no responsibility" but they could have chosen not to intentionally hurt them
        • ndiddy 1 hour ago
          Imagine if you were Atari. You've bought the rights to Transport Tycoon Deluxe from Chris Sawyer and want to sell the game up on Steam. Then you see OpenTTD (the exact same game except better in every way) also on Steam for free. What do you do?
    • applfanboysbgon 2 hours ago
      One alternative is the Nintendo route. Another is the Hololive route, wherein they started a publishing brand for indie fangames which they actively support and promote on an official Steam store page. Another example being Touhou, a one-man indie franchise with permissive commercial derivative works licensing, which has become a cultural phenomenon in Japan and to a lesser extent overseas thanks to an absolutely vibrant community that has made millions of fan illustrations, tens of thousands of albums, and thousands of fangames, hundreds of which are sold on Steam.

      If megacorps would stop being stuck up their own ass and completely irrational about how they exercise their IP rights, they would actually be able to benefit massively from allowing their fan communities to flourish. The status quo doesn't have to be this shitty, and we don't necessarily need to give credit to companies who meet the incredibly low bar of "not Nintendo".

      • 999900000999 1 hour ago
        Steam is not the only way to play games.

        Atari is very kind to say you can keep distributing a fan game, just not on a commercial storefront.

        I don’t expect to see Sonic Fan games on Steam anytime soon. Even though Sega is one of the best publishers in this regard.

        Now if OpenTDD said no , we’re leaving it on Steam for free ,Atari could probably contact Valve to get it delisted.

        A compromise is not a loss. I’ve downloaded tons of applications and games without Steam holding my hand and somehow I’m ok. Although I do wish sandboxing solutions with better gpu support existed

  • ApolloFortyNine 2 hours ago
    >Additionally, as part of the discussions we held, Atari agreed to make a contribution towards the running costs of our server infrastructure. We are also extremely grateful for the many donations that have come in over the past few days from users - your support will help keep our services going, and it is deeply appreciated.

    That's pretty cool of them.

    • charcircuit 1 hour ago
      Without knowing the rev share it could be exploitative. If OpenTDD is being sold commercially Atari shouldn't be taking all the money from all the hard work that people have put into the project over the years.
      • WarcrimeActual 1 hour ago
        Thing is, they own it. They have every right to cease and desist, I assume, and haven't. That's generous compared to most companies reactions already.
        • JoshTriplett 1 hour ago
          > Thing is, they own it.

          No, they don't. They own the game data, and the original game engine. They don't own the reimplemented Open Source game engine.

          OpenTTD did not have to do anything here. It sounds like they had a very positive interaction with Atari, in which Atari is providing them with some support and collaboration, and in exchange for that, OpenTTD agreed to formalize the requirement for "you need to own the original game data" by having people on game stores purchase the original game through them before getting OpenTTD through them.

          That seems like a pretty reasonable approach. It should be held up as a good model for collaboration. But it shouldn't be treated as "they have every right to [demand a] cease and desist".

          • ApolloFortyNine 1 hour ago
            Though it's no longer a clone, it literally was a clone when it first started (you were even supposed to supply your own totally legitimately acquired asset packs).

            So it'd be pretty much impossible to claim the engine came about as a clean room implementation. And of course, even if maybe they could win a court case (honestly don't think they could) the mere threat of one would likely make openttd quit.

            • JoshTriplett 1 hour ago
              > you were even supposed to supply your own totally legitimately acquired asset packs

              I don't have the impression that OpenTTD encouraged or sanctioned obtaining those assets illegitimately. They talked about how to extract them from the original game that you owned.

          • WarcrimeActual 1 hour ago
            They do own it. Any court would likely agree that what OpenTTD does is copy an IP they own. And they'd have the right to C&D it.
            • JoshTriplett 1 hour ago
              Reverse engineering for compatibility, and implementation of a compatible system (as long as you don't copy the original) are not just legal, they're explicitly legally protected in many jurisdictions. You'll get in serious trouble if you copy the original, but there is specific case law supporting things like emulators. See, for instance, Sony v Connectix and Sega v Accolade.
              • gmueckl 54 minutes ago
                But OpenTTD is explicitly a faithful copy of the original. It replicates the original product in appearance and behavior and is open about it. If you were to dig into source code history, mailing list archives, chat logs etc. I'm certain that you could find a lot of evidence to support this position.
                • JoshTriplett 45 minutes ago
                  "Behavior" isn't copyrightable; it explicitly isn't, in fact.

                  To what extent did they copy "appearance" other than supporting the use of the original assets?

                  It is certainly possible that they didn't scrupulously maintain clean hands, but I wouldn't automatically assume that.

                • einr 29 minutes ago
                  GNU’s Not Unix is explicitly a faithful copy of UNIX. It replicates the original product in appearance and behavior and is open about it.
            • Cthulhu_ 25 minutes ago
              It's... complicated; they own Transport Tycoon Deluxe, its code, its assets and its IP.

              Back when OpenTTD first released, it was a decompile (?) of TTD that loaded the assets of the game itself. This was... legally dubious, since reverse engineering.

              But over time they Ship of Theseus'd the game - all code rewritten from assembly to C/C++ (I don't know), open source asset packs, etc. It's still the same base game, same feel, etc but nothing of the original code or assets remain.

              I don't know enough about IP law etc to judge whether Atari would have any leg to stand on in a court of law, but it would be Complicated to say the least.

      • singpolyma3 1 hour ago
        It's clearly exploitative
        • Lammy 33 minutes ago
          Agreed. Effectively-nobody would be interested in buying it if it weren't for OpenTTD and all the improvements they've made over the years.

          It's absurd that some company can buy up and profit from thirty-year-old formerly-abandonware, and that society have been collectively browbeaten into believing in the notion of “““intellectual property””” at all.

  • beardsciences 3 hours ago
    I'm glad that Atari was willing to compromise at all. I'm happy with the updated response, and hope that it helps others understand the nuance of the situation. Anyone can still go download the main release from the official site.
    • paxys 2 hours ago
      How are people supposed to understand the "nuance of the situation" when they aren't even sharing it? What is the problem to begin with? Why can't both projects continue to exist independently?
      • striking 2 hours ago
        The bundling might feel necessary from Atari's side because OpenTTD would compete with Atari's re-release on platforms like Steam and GoG (unlike on OpenTTD's website, where you're already at the end of the funnel for OpenTTD specifically and therefore Atari doesn't feel like they're losing a sale).
      • benoau 2 hours ago
        The problem is copyright won't expire on the 1995 game until some time next century, while a French company that acquired Atari's name and copyrights 20 years ago is now asserting their exclusive rights over the IP.
      • nemomarx 2 hours ago
        OpenTTD started from the ip they now own, and it's possible Atari could try and prove that in court. I don't know if they would win, but why spend the legal fees here?
    • RGamma 1 hour ago
      Until the IP is flipped to another owner and the final squeeze begins. Gotta mirror this.
  • paxys 3 hours ago
    I'm sure I'm missing some context but what is Atari's role here exactly? Isn't OpenTTD an independent and fully legal project? What is Atari's basis for asking for a "compromise"?

    Or is it just the case that the project maintainers got paid off?

    • legitster 2 hours ago
      These are not people ripping off TTD to make a buck. If you absolutely love the game so much that you spent 20 years modding it, you're going to have some respect for the original and the publisher and are probably glad they are interested again.

      I get that it's not the same Atari as it was 30 years ago. But I liken it to you being a Beatles cover band and the estate of John Lennon reaches out to you, you're going to treat them with some sort of respect.

    • Closi 2 hours ago
      Atari own all the IP and copyright.

      While OpenTTD is open source, it's basis is really that the original game was reverse-engineered, originally using the original assets, and then rebuilt.

      Also all the map data etc is owned by Atari, so you need to have a 'genuine' copy to access all the levels etc.

      • paxys 2 hours ago
        What copyright? OpenTTD doesn't copy any code or assets from the original game. It is a ground-up rewrite. There is no copyright violation.
        • jorl17 2 hours ago
          Note that, while it is a rewrite, it was done so through disassembling the original game, not via a clean room implementation. I find this particularly relevant given that the original was written (mostly) in assembly too.
          • Closi 2 hours ago
            Also even if it is a ground up rewrite, the look and feel still matters.

            Try creating a 1:1 dupe of a Hermes bag or a Rolex and see how their legal team reacts (even if you call it an OpenBirk)

            • 20k 1 hour ago
              Clean room reimplementations of software projects have been tested in court and are legally fine
            • anthk 2 hours ago
              False. Look at https://osgameclones.com and projects like FreeDoom. You must be young and it shows how disconnected are the new generations on libre reimplementations.
              • bjt 1 hour ago
                The fact that these exist does not mean that they're immune from legal challenge. If the original creators wanted to sue, there are all kinds of claims that would have a decent shot in court (e.g. trademark, trade dress, design patents) besides "you copied our copyrighted source code." The clones exist more because people are being cool about it, and because there's not a strong economic incentive to challenge them. Those things can change at any time.
                • anthk 1 hour ago
                  Sony vs Bleem. They already lost this case in court.
                  • comex 1 hour ago
                    That was a very different case.

                    Out of the two claims, the only one that made it to appeals court was about whether it was fair use for Bleem to use screenshots of PS1 games to advertise its emulator (which was compatible with those games). The Ninth Circuit decided it was. But that's not relevant here.

                    The other claim was more relevant, as it was an unfair competition claim that apparently had something to do with Bleem's reimplementation of the PS1 BIOS. But the district court's record of the case doesn't seem to be available online, and the information I was able to find online was vague, so I don't know what exactly the facts or legal arguments were on that claim. Without an appeal it also doesn't set precedent.

                    If there were a lawsuit over OpenTTD, it would probably be for copyright infringement rather than unfair competition, and it would probably focus more on fair use and copyrightability. For fair use, it matters how much something is functional versus creative. The PS1 BIOS is relatively functional, but a game design and implementation are highly creative. On the other hand, despite being creative, game mechanics by themselves are not copyrightable. So it might come down to the extent to which OpenTTD's code was based on the reverse-engineered original code, as opposed to being a truly from-scratch reimplementation of the same mechanics. Visual appearance would also be relevant. Oracle v. Google would be an important precedent.

              • InsideOutSanta 1 hour ago
                I think I'm even older than you, because I remember what Nintendo did to the Great Giana Sisters.
              • haunter 1 hour ago
                Good luck making an open source Pokemon game clone and see how it goes
            • anthk 1 hour ago
              - OpenArena

              - Chip's Challange and custom levels pack

              - Freedoom+Blasmepher for Doom/Heretic

              - LibreQuake

              - Supertux2

              - Oolite

              - Kgoldminner/XScavenger with level sets

              - Frozen Bubble

              - Any X11/console/9front sokoban clone. Everyone reuses the same level set over and over.

        • Ekaros 2 hours ago
          It might be improved and changed in many ways. But I have zero doubt it would not lose in court any argument over copyrights. Most reasonable people would tell that it looks way too close to original. And that would probably be enough.
        • Macha 2 hours ago
          There's two issues:

          1. OpenTTD is not a clean room rewrite. It started by disassembling the original game and manually converting to C++ on a piecemeal basis.

          2. As the game was updated, sure lots of this code has been rewritten. Almost certainly the majority. But has all of it been legally rewritten? Ehh... much less clear.

          This sort of process has generally been held to produce a derived work of whatever you're cloning, even if the final result no longer contains original code, hence why clean room reverse engineering even became a thing in the first place.

          It's probably fuzzy enough at this stage that you could have a long expensive drawn out legal battle about it (and I suspect we'll see at least one for some other project in the coming years with the recent trend of "I had AI rewrite this GPL project to my MIT licensed clone"). Would OpenTTD win? Who knows. Could OpenTTD afford it? Certainly not.

          • mghackerlady 2 hours ago
            Correct me if I'm wrong but wasn't BSD in a similar legal limbo for a while? In that case wouldn't there be precedent for such projects to be legally fine so long as they've existed long enough and been heavily modified?
        • not_the_fda 2 hours ago
          Its not a clean ground-up rewrite. They dis-assembled the original binaries into assembly and started from there.
        • sylos 2 hours ago
          I read somewhere that it's not a clean room rewrite but rather it started off as a reverse engineering.
        • iso1631 2 hours ago
          If I were to create a new game from the ground up, with new artistic assets, and not an LLM in sight, with the characters of Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader playing around on the Millenium Falcon, I would be breaching copyright.

          I'm not sure if look and feel of a game like Transport Tycoon can be copyrighted, but I wouldn't like to be against it.

          (I remember buying Transport Tycoon from I think Beatles, in Altrincham. I clearly remember riding on the front seat of the bus upstairs on my way to Flixton back in 1994 reading the manual)

        • designerarvid 2 hours ago
          Reproducing someone’s intellectual property and publishing it is exactly what constitutes a copyright violation.

          You can retype someone’s book with your keyboard, it’s still not yours.

          • Sharlin 2 hours ago
            Reproducing the surface behavior of a program, no matter how faithfully, is not in itself copyright violation if it's a cleanroom implementation. But int this case it's not to write the new one, the developers studied (and manually translated to C++) the original code, not just the program's behavior. So this is more of a case of a derived work, like a translation of a novel.
          • anthk 2 hours ago
            Learn something new, dear GenZers:

            https://osgameclones.com/

            Maybe you all realize how much brainwashed from corporations yall actually are.

            • designerarvid 59 minutes ago
              GenZ?
            • iso1631 1 hour ago
              Look and Feel in computers and how it interacts with copyright is hardly something new

              https://jolt.law.harvard.edu/assets/articlePDFs/v03/03HarvJL...

              • anthk 1 hour ago
                And Sony vs Bleem (or the IBM BIOS reimplementation) already set a precedent so that doesn't really matter anymore. Look at Wine. Or Exegutor. Or DOSBox.

                All of them totally legal reimplementing either prior look and feel and functionality.

                • iso1631 1 hour ago
                  > The code of computer programs are excluded from design protection, but visual aspects of software are very commonly protectable as long as they are ‘new’ (i.e. not a direct copy of anything that has come before) and possess ‘individual character’ (i.e. that the design produces a different ‘overall impression’ than anything that has come before)

                  I'm no expect, but Chris Sawyer style games certainly provided a unique overall impression to me. Whether it needs to be a registered design or not I couldn't say, but it's not going to be cheap to find out.

                  More recent battles have relied on Trademark and Patent law rather than Copyright, but "Look and Feel" is still a legal grey area

          • orphea 2 hours ago
            Reproducing is absolutely not a copyright violation. Otherwise emulators would have no legal option to exist.
            • designerarvid 40 minutes ago
              That is a question about which copyrights are enforced. Different question.
        • ikiris 1 hour ago
          It seems you don't understand copyright. The entire game is copyrighted. Not just the specific sprites.

          You can see the same effect if someone were to make a yellow short guy with metal claws and regeneration as a character.

        • hrmtst93837 47 minutes ago
          [dead]
        • hrmtst93837 1 hour ago
          [dead]
      • lstodd 2 hours ago
        What levels? TTD, Open or no has no levels, only a map generator, and you seriously don't want to try the reimplementation of the original one.
    • Cthulhu_ 20 minutes ago
      While Atari holds the rights to Transport Tycoon, I'd argue that at this point taking OpenTTD down would be a huge footgun; like Nintendo with emulators, they can also buy / license the engine and re-release the game on modern platforms under its official name.
    • kabdib 2 hours ago
      I really wonder who "Atari" is these days . . .
      • Cthulhu_ 22 minutes ago
        Currently (and for the past 25 odd years) it's a brand owned by a French holding company called Atari SA, formely known as Infogrames.
    • LoganDark 2 hours ago
      Atari probably threatened to take it down if there wouldn't be a compromise. So a compromise was worked out that wouldn't require a takedown.
      • lstodd 2 hours ago
        Pretty much this. No one was interested in playing corporate games, and Steam/GoG isn't that important anyway.
  • mhitza 2 hours ago
    The initial post has omitted any reason for the change. Of course people would speculate, including in the HN comments.

    What seemed majority at the time was the idea of some collaboration/partnership and monetary exchange.

    I think its a good lesson in communication, especially when you have a dedicated community. Transparency is welcome.

    Regarding Atari and "their rights", there hasn't been an Atari for way too long and the IP was passed between companies left and right without additive value to users. I expect transport tycoon to be another cash grab, but happy to be surprised for the better.

    • maybewhenthesun 2 hours ago
      Atari being the commercial firm it is, I could very well imagine that stuff was under NDA. Just 'by default', because that's what the lawyers like. And only when angry speculations emerged they could be persuaded to just openly communicate.

      Or the OpenTTD guys were not the best communicators. Considering it's the OpenTTD creators live at the intersection of the groups 'programmers' and 'adults who like to play with train sets' it wouldn't be a stretch.

      All in all I think this collaborative approach is very much the preferred outcome.

      All those people saying 'the open web is dead' and 'people don't download from websites anymore' are exaggerating imo.

  • NietTim 1 hour ago
    I am very happy that this long stand grey area licensing situation around something I enjoy deeply has been resolved in what seems like the most perfect way possible
  • nubinetwork 7 minutes ago
    > please be nice to Atari

    You're not my mom...

  • yellowapple 2 hours ago
    In situations like this it's odd to me that the rightsholder wouldn't just sell an official build of the FOSS reimplementation with the assets (legally) included. If some of the proceeds end up going toward the FOSS reimplementation's donations then it seems like an easy win-win.
    • sho_hn 2 hours ago
      There are actually cases this has happened in (e.g. re-releases using ScummVM under the hood; id basing products on community source ports, etc.), but it's not always that simple.

      Chris Sawyer as creator for example is known to have particular opinions on this as I recall, and if you e.g. look over to film making there's also a hot debate over preserving original artistic intent and original creations over later remasters. OpenTTD is more than a maintenance upgrade, it's a continuation and a different game.

      Honestly I think it's probably just OK what Atari has done here. Monetizing the original assets is well in their rights both legally and morally (especially considering e.g. royalities to Chris), OpenTTD remains available everywhere, they're monetarily supporting OpenTTS, gamers will find it.

      Note that once a commercial company decides to ship a FOSS project, they also are much more invested in potentially controlling its direction to different ends. This setup keeps OpenTTD community-run and independent, free to make decisions independent of a commercial agenda. This also feels worth protecting.

      • bombcar 35 minutes ago
        Another example is Heroes III with VCMI and HotA and other similar things. Some are attempts to do a bug-for-bug "vanilla" recreation, others expand on it in defined ways, still others add new features "in the spirit" of the original.

        When you get to the last, you can definitely see how the original creator/artists could disagree.

  • c12 10 minutes ago
    In a world full of Nintendos, be Atari.
  • jwitthuhn 1 hour ago
    So they were not "pressured" but Atari contacted them and they proceeded to make this decision based because they "needed to balance Atari’s commercial interests".

    That sound indistinguishable from being pressured.

    • IshKebab 1 hour ago
      I think they're saying Atari didn't threaten them but they both understood that they could have. Honestly it sounds like Atari were trying to be nice. Like "you technically aren't allowed to do that, and we could just set our lawyers on you, but we'd like to not do that while also making money on our re-release".

      This seems like a perfectly reasonable compromise to me.

      • singpolyma3 1 hour ago
        How is "I haven't talked to my lawyer yet but you know I could" not a threat/pressure?
        • NietTim 56 minutes ago
          There is no reason to assume they said that and all the reason to assume they didn't say that.
    • singpolyma3 1 hour ago
      Indeed. It sounds like they were further pressured to say they were not being pressured.
      • JoshTriplett 1 hour ago
        The types of folks who make reimplemented game engines often do it as a labor of love towards the original. And the best companies often have great appreciation for their modding communities and preservationists. (Witness the good collaborations between some companies and SCUMMVM, for instance.) This may well have been a conversation that was entirely reasonable and respectful.
  • mikkupikku 1 hour ago
    Seems reasonable to me. Back when I started playing OpenTTD, about 20 years ago, you had to provide your own data files from your ostensibly legal copy of TTD. They changed that after they started distributing free alternative graphics, but to be frank the strict legal status of both OpenTTD and OpenRCT2 has always seemed mildly dubious to me, on account of both projects being based off disassembled code. Atari is being fairly reasonable and gentlemenly about this.
  • shevy-java 1 hour ago
    Would be nice to see OpenTTD on Steam/GOG, for a younger audience.

    Some games have a good replayfactor. Transport Tycoon Deluxe was nice in this regard; the spirit should be retained so younger folks can play it.

  • CivBase 3 hours ago
    > we have not been “pressured” by Atari to make these changes.

    > Atari approached us to explain their plans for the Transport Tycoon Deluxe re-release, and what it might mean for OpenTTD.

    > we understood that a compromise would be needed to balance Atari’s commercial interests […] against the availability of a free, well-developed evolution of the game.

    Sounds to me like you were pressured by Atari to make these changes.

    • calibas 1 hour ago
      Everyone's being diplomatic, including most of the HN comments.

      This seems to be the simplest compromise, and allows OpenTTD to continue existing without too many problems from Atari, so people don't want to make waves.

    • NietTim 58 minutes ago
      There is no way not to, OpenTTD has 0 cards to play since everything is explicitly build on IP that is not theirs, and they know it. They were "not pressured" because Atari didn't utter threats to them, it didn't need to come to that because the OpenTTD people were reasonable, and so was Atari.

      Not sure why so many commenters are failing to grasp this.

    • speefers 2 hours ago
      [dead]
  • junaru 2 hours ago
    Atari is releasing an inferior product and needs the superior community one delisted. The remaster cannot compete, simple as.
    • ethanrutherford 2 hours ago
      it is neither being delisted, nor was it requested to be. As far as rights holders exercising their rights, this is about the most collaborative way it could have gone. Not every rights holder is a John Carmack.
      • WarcrimeActual 1 hour ago
        This guy ended his thought with "simple as". He's not a smart man.
  • Lammy 3 hours ago
    > a compromise would be needed to balance Atari’s commercial interests (which of course they are entitled to pursue as the rights holder)

    No, fuck 'em. They had nothing to do with developing the game, and in a sane copyright structure a thirty-year-old work would be public domain by now.

    • blizdiddy 3 hours ago
      Agreed. Publishers need to be knocked off this absurd moral high ground. If merely being rich is enough for me to profit off of Miles Davis songs for decades after his death, copyright is just another wealth redistribution to the rich. Steal all the games and music, and any ghoul that claims I’m stifling creativity can compare their compositions to mine.
    • Aurornis 1 hour ago
      > They had nothing to do with developing the game

      OpenTTD started as an effort to translate the original game’s assembly into higher level code.

      It was not a clean room implementation. The original code was used as a base.

      • Lammy 50 minutes ago
        Who gives a shit? It's from 1995 and nu-Atari had nothing to do with it.
        • AndrewDucker 35 minutes ago
          Copyright from 1995 has not expired.
    • maybewhenthesun 2 hours ago
      > in a sane copyright structure

      You are not wrong. But alas we don't have that. ANd in the reality we live in this collaboration is way better than the alternative.

      • blizdiddy 1 hour ago
        We know what the law is… the law is bullshit.

        Is it easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism?

        • AndrewDucker 33 minutes ago
          What you can imagine has very little to bear on what they can get away with without being legally shut down.
        • passivegains 26 minutes ago
          I mean, yeah. There's enough nukes locked and loaded around the globe to end human civilization as we know it in minutes. Nobody's made a bomb that can fix socioeconomics.
    • Dylan16807 3 hours ago
      Well, they shouldn't be entitled but they are entitled.
    • WarcrimeActual 1 hour ago
      But it's not and we don't live in fantasy land. Your approach would have it shut down tomorrow.
  • maCDzP 2 hours ago
    Now with AI I wonder if it’s possible to just let agents build a perfect emulation of the game. It reminds me of fuzzers. You let the agent go loose on the game and it brute forces every possible state. Then recreates the code. It’s very inefficient- but it probably works.
    • einr 21 minutes ago
      You’re going to brute force every possible state of a sandbox building game. See you on the other side of the heat death of the universe; hope you stocked up on Claude Code credits.
    • nemomarx 2 hours ago
      Why would you when an open source version already exists?
    • bigfishrunning 2 hours ago
      So https://malus.sh/

      Good luck with all that