this post was submitted on 22 Apr 2026
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Stop Killing Games initiative doesn't force developers to maintain the game; it only obliges them to release whatever tools necessary for people to self-host a game server.
This way, if anyone still cares about the game, they can start their own server and keep playing it.
And the stupidest part of this is the 'omg my IP' angle from a publisher.
You've destroyed this game because it's not economically viable for you, and therefore the IP of how the server-side operates has no value; these are no longer secrets worth protecting.
If someone else is willing to host it at their cost then the only thing that can do is bolster the franchise. When a niche game has a devoted following that's willing to build infrastructure to keep playing together, then you know it was a management fuck-up and not a game one that killed it.
There’s the sticking point (well, one of them): sometimes, servers are shut down because the developer wants players to buy a NEW game that they’ll make more money on. If gamers can just play the old game forever, they’re less likely to buy and play the new game whose servers have improved the rent seeking algorithms.
Thank you for clarifying but I still think this has the guac problem, which is the customer dictating "I think this is easy/cheap/free so you should just give it to me." You don't know what effort or cost is involved. There could be license entanglements. Running code that you don't have the source for to be able to patch vulnerabilities in is a bad idea. This stuff should be negotiated voluntarily. I don't see an arguments about market failure or externalities or monopolies to justify bringing in a regulation.
This is actually addressed as well. The initiative doesn't oblige currently developed or already released games to have such features, as it recognizes all the financial/legal complications that may arise. It only concerns future games, and refers to the experience of many old games being initially designed with player servers in mind, rendering it possible to play them even now.
It is absolutely possible and normal to do this, and it's really only the recent practice to act otherwise, which is why Stop Killing Games arose just now.
That being said, of course this decision would affect the developer's bottom line. First, as another commenter mentioned, they won't be able to push new games so aggressiely if players can stick to the old one, forcing them to focus on quality and originality of content, which are both more expensive. Second, publishing server code renders them unable to break licenses and steal server code, forcing to make in-house solutions or compromise with open-source. This is, by the way, why Microsoft only now opened the code of MS-DOS - it waited until all the potential lawsuits on IP infringement are expired.
Stop Killing Games will force more transparency, and developers hate that, because they don't want to admit they manipulated players and broke the law to get here. But they should never have done either in the first place.
What law is a developer breaking when they shut down an old game?
None, and that's subject to change by Stop Killing Games.
By breaking the law, I meant stealing IP of others and obfuscating the code so that no one would find out.