

That was back in 2003 which incidentally mainly used for Morrowind.

My very first computer was not self built, but I did upgrade the ram and video card. My first PC built entirely from the ground up was back in 2007 for Oblivion, I did the same in 2012 for Skyrim, and I just did another build last year in 2016. I make a clone more or less, with a new theme, new graphics, but as close as possible to the original experience and feel as I can get.I mainly keep my PC as a Bethesda box. We gather enough money to fund development, like through kickstarter or something. Someone else picks up the project and does it for free. It may or may not be released in whenever. I work on this nonprofit remake in my freetime. As much as I'd love to be able to do that just to play the game again, I personally can't afford to work for free in my situation. > Long story short he could probably allow us to do a "nonprofit" remake of the original, but probably nothing commercial and no sequel from what I understand. > Alright, got a reply from Daniel COok concerning the rights to the IP, and it turns out that, well, it's complicated. Not sure how legal it would be as a commercial remake would not be legal Maybe we could do a petition for a remake?Īs light_bringer suggested a Kickstarter would be a good petition/poll to see how many people would be interested in an non-profit remake which has to be funded external but then stay free.

Otherwise, we might try to do a "clone" that would bring back the same kind of experience/gameplay/feel but under a different label.

> We're going to try and reach him, see what he thinks about it since the game has been down for years anyway. A Daniel Cook was behind Bunni: How we first met so technically we're not allowed to. talked to a friend about this and he noticed that while the assets are free to use in commercial projects, we're not allowed to make clones of games made by their author.
