Outside of something like that, I don't know why things would change. I'd think the best odds of a change in priorities would probably be if and when the Myst movie or TV show finally comes into being, Ubisoft might try to ride that wave of publicity. But I don't think it's incompetence or malice or stubbornness that stops Ubisoft from putting the games out, it's just that they'll always have other priorities. ![]() So again I don't think it's impossible, and as I understand it Cyan reaches out to them periodically to see if a deal can be made. It might not be a total loss, but that's time and energy and money they could spend on one of their many other properties, where they don't have to share the profits and where the re-release might help promote newer releases in the franchise. Myst III (courtesy UbiSoft Entertainment, 2001) narrative is defined as a mental image, or cognitive construct, that can be activated by various types of. The Myst games are part of a franchise that Ubisoft doesn't own, so they'd need to invest money into a re-release, then share the profits with Cyan. They don't have much incentive to release. GoG might be willing to do some of that work for their store, but Ubisoft would likely want to release on Steam for the bigger audience. ![]() While hardcore fans are willing to jump through hoops or use third-party executables to launch the game, Ubisoft would be responsible for packaging a version that "just works" if they wanted to release them on Steam. Exile and Revelation are both in a sort of CD-rom middle-ground where they aren't old enough to play smoothly in emulators, but aren't new enough to run natively in current versions of Windows. The games don't run well or easily on modern computers.
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