Given the processing power of most modern tech, it would make sense if it were easy to get old video games up and running on modern systems. The average smartphone has dramatically more juice than retro game consoles, which ran on 256 bytes of RAM and a dream. Unfortunately, accessing old games can be a major pain. Their lack of availability isn’t a tech problem; it’s a business one. Despite platitudes like anniversary posts on social media, most modern video game publishers don’t care about making their back catalogs easily accessible.
It’s all the more depressing because just two console generations ago, the Nintendo Wii’s Virtual Console was a hub of retro games, letting you download NES, SNES, N64, and even games from non-Nintendo systems for reasonable prices. Since then, Nintendo realized it could use this library of retro standbys to bolster an otherwise lackluster subscription service in Nintendo Switch Online. Today you can’t directly buy games that were on sale for the Wii as recently as 2019. After all, why sell something once when you can keep selling it over and over?
Not only did Nintendo take down its old, superior digital marketplace, but it isn’t alone in doing this. The stores for the Wii, 3DS, Xbox 360, PS3, PSP, and PS Vita are dead, making seminal works like Silent Hill, Ninja Gaiden Black, and many others unavailable through official channels. Yes, you can play them through fan-made emulators, which use reverse-engineered software to mimic the hardware of these systems, but that’s a hoop that only hardcore players will jump through.
That’s why it’s such a pleasant surprise that Capcom re-released the first three Resident Evil games on Steam for a discounted $4.99 last week. Technically, these aren’t the original PSX versions you’re probably familiar with, but ports of the mostly similar PC releases altered to work on modern systems by the preservation-focused platform Good Old Games (GOG). A Game Business interview with the digital storefront’s managing director, Maciej Gołębiewski, confirmed that GOG approached Capcom about bringing these old games back and not the other way around: “Capcom were like, ‘we have all of those remakes. It’s already the superior experience to those games,’” Gołębiewski said in the interview. “They didn’t really see the value in bringing back the vanilla versions. It took a lot of convincing that there is an audience that has a lot of memories about those games, and would love to experience exactly the same game again. Thankfully, we were able to convince them.” Due to their efforts, all three games were released on the GOG storefront two years ago.
