• Modders are working on an offline mod for troubled game The Day Before.
• Development studio Fntastic has closed its doors and the game’s servers will shut down in January.
• Luci0 and fskartd are working on a crack that would allow players to play the game offline.
Judging by screenshots, such a shame for so much hard work to go to waste. Wish they would open source it. I would suggest AGPL to protect their IP from being stolen(IANAL so don’t quote me), but I would take anything if it meant the work of talented people didn’t go to waste.
Hopefully a modding scene can thrive and make something decent from these ashes.
There was no hard work*, it’s made almost entirely of purchased assets and gameplay systems.
*There was hard work on behalf of the people who made the assets for sale.
I wonder how you could open source a game that had purchased assets. If they would have to be remade or if it would be similar to an open source engine recreation like OpenRCT2 where you need to supply your own files from the game.
Good question, yeah probably like some other community remakes where you need the original files.
Probably a moot point as the engine itself isn’t open source, although I guess they could give out the project file.
I think that’s how the open source ports of Doom and Quake work. The shareware files are enough to get it up and running, since they’re free to distribute.
As for the engine in this specific case, it’s Unreal, possibly without any modification, so the engine is already available with source.
It was all just an asset flip. So those assets aren’t wasted, you can just buy them online for a different project.
Why’d you have to bring up anal all lf a sudden
IANAL = I Am Not A Lawyer
I can’t tell if you’re making a joke or not so there is the definition of the acronym. I added the comment because AGPL may not be the best suited license for it or any similar project. But from what I can recall, AGPL also requires forks/modifications for SaaS purposes to also make their source code available. Whereas GPL, or any others from what I can tell(again not a lawyer), does not require forks/modifications for SaaS to follow the same license.