How Long Will Your Favorite Game Be Supported?
PC gaming has lots going for it. Developers don’t have to get things approved for the platform, anyone can make a game, and sometimes being able to buy and download a full game without needing to scrape around in a desk drawer for a disc or CD key are all nice things. One thing that Windows gaming has against it, for me anyway, is the tragedy of orphaned titles. After a couple of years games might not run due to the latest and greatest Windows patch, maybe a new Windows version shows up that can’t run it properly, and your disc is now a coaster even though it might have been one of your favorite games ever.
Sometimes, however, games buck that trend and get lots of love long past their twilight years. Case in point? Half-Life just got a new patch this week. That’s Half-Life 1, people, not the shiny Source-engine Half-Life 2. That’s the 1998 game. The nineties. Remember them? Apparently Valve needed to close a few exploits in “cvar codes” whatever those are.
I think I’ve only seen patch longevity like this from Blizzard for their insanely successful Starcraft and Diablo 2 games. What are some of the oldest patches you’ve seen for PC games?
Source: VoodooExtreme
Tags: blizzard, burnout paradise, criterion, diablo, diablo 2, half life, patch, PS3, starcraft, steam, valve, XBOX 360






