So I woke up to a bit of a surprise. The GOG Preservation Program had struck again, this time preserving the iconic JRPG āBreath of Fire IV.ā
āBreath of Fire IVā was preserved thanks to the Dreamlist, a community-driven effort where users vote on games they want GOG to preserve. Games that are added to the GOG Preservation Program are āpreserved forever,ā meaning GOG will update the titles in perpetuity to ensure they are available and run on the latest available hardware.
If youāve ever tried to play an old game, especially before GOG came into being, then you know what an absolute chore that can be. Newer processors can cause games to run too fast to be playable. Driver conflicts can lead to crashes. Thatās not to mention you may not even be able to physically play those old discs you have, since most new machines no longer have CD drives (and god help you if theyāre on floppy discs!).
But the thing about GOGās Preservation Program is that itās more than just updating games, and I think they genuinely deserve some praise for that. See, if you watch the video, thereās more than just āBreath of Fire IVā being added.
For starters, three additional āUltimaā titles ā āUltima Underworld 1,ā āUltima Underworld 2,ā and āUltima IX: Ascensionā have been added to the program as well. With these additions, the entirety of āUltimaā is now preserved and playable on modern hardware for the first time ever.
Youād be forgiven if youāre a newer gamer for not being familiar with it, but the āUltimaā franchise defined RPGs in the ā90s. But it was also notoriously a chore to run on modern hardware, and the waning interest meant it was never really a contender for any kind of re-release.

Runes now only float when theyāre supposed to in Ultima IX: Ascension, thanks to GOG.
But GOG went above and beyond here. Not only are they playable on modern hardware, but some common bugs have been fixed. Theyāve also added new French and German language support, meaning not only are these games preserved forever, but now more gamers can play them than ever before.
Itās a great service at a time when game preservation is an increasingly perilous thing. In a 2023 report, the Video Game History Foundation reported that 87% of games are currently out of print. There are thousands of titles which are considered lost media, either completely unplayable, unpurchasable, or just outright forgotten as they fell by the wayside.
GOGās service isnāt perfect. Itās still beholden to rights and licensing, which means games canāt just magically appear on the service. Thatās why titles like āNo One Lives Forever,ā a fan-favorite FPS spy romp thatās been out of print for decades and never released digitally, remain on the Dreamlist and not in the GPP; no one is really sure who owns that one.
But nonetheless, games like āBreath of Fire IV,ā āUltima IX,ā and more still get to be loved by new audiences. The releases theyāve made so far have been fairly high-profile surprises, too, with the last wave including āSilent Hill 2,ā āWing Commander,ā and more. The GOG Preservation Program is a huge leap forward for the preservation of game history, something that far too few people take seriously, and I think they deserve a lot more praise and recognition for that work.
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