Drascula wants to take over the world!
Moderator: ScummVM Team
Drascula wants to take over the world!
You know there's something wrong when Count Drascula stops watching TV and starts conspiring with his faithful sidekick, Igor, to take over the world. And he wants to do that before tonight's football match starts! You are John Hacker and your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to rescue your girlfriend Billy Jean from Count Drascula's nefarious clutches.
You will need your Drascula CD, a daily build of ScummVM and drascula.dat.
If you find a bug then please report it to our bug tracker. Please ensure that it follows the bug submission guidelines. You may also submit screenshots according to the screenshot guidelines
You will need your Drascula CD, a daily build of ScummVM and drascula.dat.
If you find a bug then please report it to our bug tracker. Please ensure that it follows the bug submission guidelines. You may also submit screenshots according to the screenshot guidelines
There's news about this on a spanish site about adventure games:
http://la-aventura.net/noticias/2008/06 ... u-catalogo
http://la-aventura.net/noticias/2008/06 ... u-catalogo
There was an English version of Drascula.The game was playable in DOS and Windows.I don't think that the game is still sold.It had english audio (voiceacting) also.The 0.12 update of ScummVM will be great.So many "new" nice games supported and soon Discworld too...Great work!
Last edited by Tsampikos on Sun Jun 22, 2008 7:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- eriktorbjorn
- ScummVM Developer
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Copyright usually does expire eventually. That's how things like Project Gutenberg and the Mutopia Project can operate.Tsampikos wrote:I agree with you.Copyright does never vanish.
But it takes a long time. In the USA, it's something like the lifetime of the author, plus another 70 years. If it's "work for hire", i.e. the copyright is not held by a person, it's 120 years after creation or 95 years after publication, whichever is shorter. But I wouldn't be surprised if it's extended further in the future. They say that's what happened the last time the original Mickey Mouse cartoons were about to enter the public domain.
Well by the time copyright expires on software it's well beyond any system it ever ran on. Even the old punch cards are still under copyright. The best you can hope for is a company releasing a game into the PD or as freeware, and no freeware is not public domain software nor is shareware. If there's a title you would like to see released as freeware/PD you need to write to the creators. But as you can see with Discworld as an example it can take years to hunt them down. I spent 3 years trying to find one of the developers of an old game I wanted to remake, in the end I had to give up because every lead turned up empty, even his co-developer had no idea where he'd disappeared to.
- sanguinehearts
- Posts: 378
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