Yeah. The closest thing to the abandonware concept existing in reality is where the copyright holder folds, its assets are liquidated and no one buys the rights. In which case, I guess it would become public domain after 70 years. But, that basically never happens, someone's always willing to pick up the rights to a failed company's IPs, even if it's only for a couple of hundred bucks.Nevyrmoore said:I did say at best. This happens to be the first I've heard of this.Starke said:It is not abandonware. Sorry if this has been said before. The game is caught up in a copyright snafu between (IIRC) EA, Irrational Games, and maybe Warren Specter, the copyright is being enforced, but it cannot be released by anyone at present.Nevyrmoore said:I wouldn't trust that website as far as I would throw it. It's a Windows game and it certainly does not have freeware status. At best, it has abandonware status, which only means no one will give a shit if you do download it.TsunamiWombat said:Double Edit: It's a DOS game, and is now considered freeware, so downloading it for free is not illegal.
Not that it matters anyway, because abandonware isn't a legally accepted status and is still copyright infringement.
EDIT: I kinda seem to recall Sierra or someone actually labeling some of their back catalog as abandonware. But, strictly speaking that's a company changing the way they're licensing a given product, so not the same thing at all.
EDIT2: and yes, you did say it best. Credit where credit is due, good sir.