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In today's Throwback Thursday, we'd like to take you on an extraordinary journey to one of the most beautifully designed worlds in games.

Beyond Good and Evil® is a critically acclaimed third-person action-adventure/stealth game and definitely one of the best games of all time. The peaceful planet Hillys is under constant siege by the evil alien DomZ forces, who frequently launch attacks on the planet and abduct its inhabitants. Jade, a freelance reporter, seeks to uncover the secret behind Hillys's military - the "Alpha Sections" - inability (or reluctance) to repel the invaders. Her curiosity soon sees her knee-deep in a conspiracy that goes deeper than she could have imagined. Armed with a camera, Dai-Jo staff, loyal friends and a lot of guts, Jade sets out to expose the conspirators.



A beautifully built world, diverse gameplay, great characters should be enough to convince you. But let's give the voice to one of our teammates who will share why the game stands the test of time, and why he's striving to play the sequel.

Recommended by Bartosz, Head of Business Development at GOG
[i]I love character-driven storytelling in games and in my humble opinion, there are very few games released in 2000s that did it as well as Beyond Good & Evil. To this day I remember how impressed I was by the opening sequence - Jade (lead heroine) sitting by the lighthouse, meditating, only to be thrown into a fierce fight with alien invasion a few seconds later. And it only gets better with each hour - BG&E has created one of the most unique worlds I had pleasure exploring, characters I remember, and a soundtrack you will be humming throughout the game. It’s easy to tell Michael Ancel, game’s creator, has put his heart into this title.
It’s the sum of many elements that makes the experience so enjoyable too - open world that’s just big enough for the purpose of storytelling, stealth sections that don’t drag too long and exploration that is always rewarding. There is a reason fans have been begging for a sequel for the past 19 years - give it a try to find out for yourself why![/i]

The Throwback Thursday series is done in cooperation with The Video Games History Foundation – a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving, celebrating and teaching the history of video games. If you want to support them, we encourage you to check their donation page.
Undoubtedly one of Ubisoft's best products of its time. Wonderful video game.
Since gog.com is doing a throwback Thursday for a Ubisoft video game, I hope this means gog.com is working behind the scenes with Ubisoft to release more Ubisoft published video games for sale on gog.com in 2022.

Who am I kidding this is not happening, but at least in the alternate universe where I live I am playing Assassin's Creed III and Far Cry 3 and Far Cry 4 on gog.com 100% Digital Rights Management (DRM) free.

With all of that being said Beyond Good & Evil is one of Ubisofts best video games of that time, I do not think Beyond Good & Evil 2 is ever coming out.
Not seeing the point of a history project that keeps the doors closed. Pretty sure the point of digitizing 25tb of data is to have open to the public. But going to their website p, they provide nothing but a handful of people having an oversized game collection and begging for maintenance money. I can do the same thing with my collection and nobody give a sh!t.

Seems a waste of money to dangle that in front of people and give nothing to the public that they expect to support them.
Getting donations for collecting games, why didn't I think of that.
Attachments:
So, when will it be updated?
Oh yes, the inferior GOG release with no controller support, unlike everywhere else. They are right about one thing, it is a throwback, and they should definitely throw it back.
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ChuckBeaver: Not seeing the point of a history project that keeps the doors closed. Pretty sure the point of digitizing 25tb of data is to have open to the public. But going to their website p, they provide nothing but a handful of people having an oversized game collection and begging for maintenance money. I can do the same thing with my collection and nobody give a sh!t.

Seems a waste of money to dangle that in front of people and give nothing to the public that they expect to support them.
Its probably legal issues, though I would love to see them just giving away "abandonware" for free. As in, games old and don't get sold so heres a free copy.

I mean even if there are legal issues, you can't just sue them for fun. The legal rightsholder has to make the first step.

I've seen this very thing in the amiga community where people discussed whether or not games should be made available for free, after all the games can't be sold because not many people own an amiga and its basically all depricated. The official devs and publishers of a 30 year old game had to chime in the forum to say "do whatever the fuck you want" so people had some direction. And this happened a whole lot. Its super rare for the community to actually have a running economy around something that doesn't make any money and essentially only exist as part of old electronic entertainment history now.

With this written, GOG could make sure to actually provide a store for these games to be sold. I would love to buy Amiga and C64 games from this store (not just a few, but hundreds or thousands of them). There is a lot of legal rights expertise in the amiga community. After all, commodore home computers were always for its software piracy due to the company running the ship blindly which meant that everyone was on their own. It was essentially a bubble that bursted and they had to close doors. With the C64, there were so many home computers sold that they still made money from sellion millions of home PCs regardless of the piracy and "we don't care" company lead. The Amiga era didn't fully break even while Commodore was too blind to expand sensibly. The Amiga gaming console was one of those misteps as well.

If people who run such a museum/foundation and publishers of old games/stores could shake hands this could mean that GOG could sell these games on their store as a middle man business full of middle mans (often enough, publishers of old games don't even know what licenses they own and these old game archivers often own games second hand), that would be a smart move but all parties need to discuss that one out.
I keep promising myself I'll give it another shot eventually. I keep hearing about how super-duper it is, but when I tried it I was quite underwhelmed.
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EnforcerSunWoo: Oh yes, the inferior GOG release with no controller support, unlike everywhere else.
It's a PC release, what would you need a controller for?
Pity this game runs very bugily nowadays, I loved it when I bought it when it rereleased at a lower price.
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Breja: I keep promising myself I'll give it another shot eventually. I keep hearing about how super-duper it is, but when I tried it I was quite underwhelmed.
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EnforcerSunWoo: Oh yes, the inferior GOG release with no controller support, unlike everywhere else.
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Breja: It's a PC release, what would you need a controller for?
There are a lot of people using gamepad on PC. Wrist issues are a thing, you know. Anti Micro works wonders for any game that doesn't support gamepad (sometimes it even surpasses the native support).

About the game: Beyond Good & Evil is one of the greatest games ever made, regardless the age of the player. There is something for everyone in it. The cartoony style even holds up today, but a texture remaster would be great.
Really great gem of the time period, really enjoyed this one when it came out.
Shame that BG&E2 turned out to be the worst of all Ubisoft design philosophy rolled into one.

Infinite universe multiplayer prequel nonsense. Whatever happened to MAKE A STRAIGHT SEQUEL?
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Johnathanamz: Since gog.com is doing a throwback Thursday for a Ubisoft video game, I hope this means gog.com is working behind the scenes with Ubisoft to release more Ubisoft published video games for sale on gog.com in 2022.

Who am I kidding this is not happening, but at least in the alternate universe where I live I am playing Assassin's Creed III and Far Cry 3 and Far Cry 4 on gog.com 100% Digital Rights Management (DRM) free.

With all of that being said Beyond Good & Evil is one of Ubisofts best video games of that time, I do not think Beyond Good & Evil 2 is ever coming out.
I wouldn't piss on Yves Guillemot if he was on fire. Don't give money to sex abusers and those who endorse, cover up and befriend abusers.
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Dray2k: The official devs and publishers of a 30 year old game had to chime in the forum to say "do whatever the fuck you want" so people had some direction. And this happened a whole lot.
It was a very different software business from the one 20 years later. Most games were still written by individuals, and a lot of contracts were unlike more modern publishing deals, but the "software label" or "software house" concept where the original author of the software often kept or regained copyright of their work. For a lot of games from that era it really is enough for one guy to say 'OK' to be legally in the clear. But for any major label title from the 21st century like BG&E, better believe that vulturous lawyers will shield the s°%# out of that IP until its protection runs out in two-thousand-four-hundred-whatever… =(

As for the game, BG&E is also one of my own absolute favourite action-adventures. But I'm always a bit surprised to hear from BG&E fans that are genuinely still looking forward to BG&E2… I was excited, too, when it was first announced. Then I lost more and more interest with every new bit of information, because every time it was made more clear that the game would have nothing to do with the original except for the title. That massively hyped trailer was the low-point and the ultimate end of it for me, it tried so, so hard to be edgy, it was embarrassing. Heck, even Michel Ancel has left the project, so what hope is really left for it?