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posted by martyb on Tuesday July 31 2018, @05:27AM   Printer-friendly
from the Godzilla-stomping-action dept.

TorrentFreak:

After more than a quarter-century, SimCity 2000 still receives plenty of interest from nostalgic gamers who like to relive their early gaming experiences. This is likely one of the reasons why developer Nicholas Ochoa decided to code a remake using the Electron framework.

The game, titled OpenSC2K, was released on GitHub earlier this year and received quite a bit of attention on sites such as Reddit and Hacker News.

While it is billed as an “open source” version, the remake did include original artwork, belonging to Electronic Arts. These images and sounds are definitely not free to use, something the developer is fully aware of now.

A few days ago Electronic Arts sent a DMCA takedown notice to GitHub asking the platform to remove the infringing repository from its site.

“Assets from the game SimCity 2000 are being infringed upon,” EA writes. The company points out that the game can be purchased legally through Origin where it’s still being sold for a few dollars.

While OpenSC2K is far from a full remake, Electronic Arts makes it clear that the SimCity 2000 assets are not for public use.


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  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Tuesday July 31 2018, @04:42PM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Tuesday July 31 2018, @04:42PM (#715271)

    We've had open-source game remakes like this for a very long time now, including the open-source DOOM engines (which was actually the real thing, not a remake, but the point is the same here). Doesn't everyone know by now that you can't include the original game's assets with the open-source code? And that the standard way of handling this is to actually require the user to get the original game, and then have a script which uses those assets with the new engine? This sidesteps the legality, and most games are easy enough to download (not quite legally...) online, though if they're available for a few bucks as this one is, that'll probably help drive sales which the company surely wouldn't mind.

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