For $6 you can get a Mac-compatible version from GOG.com. The Windows version on GOG.com is just the DOS version running inside DOSBox, and I'd be surprised if the Mac version isn't too.
That's the irony of the Mac processor switch: it's usually easier to run an old game in DOSBox or a Windows VM than to run a classic MacOS or PowerPC OS X game.
I suppose it has to be asked. Will installing Origin or this specific title result in the installation of intrusive and undisclosed DRM software on my computer? If so, can the game title still be played after removing Origin and any bundled DRM?
Then it is not free as in speech. It is not free as in beer. It is available at the small, non-monetary cost of all of your privacy plus some of your control over your computer.
EA has failed its race. It has failed itself. It has failed the human it knows as the customer. The gamer, its playmate, it has failed. Its heart has not been valiant enough, its marketing has not been skilled enough, and it has failed the true gamers.
In fact, that would send a very clear message to EA that their DRM is worth, at best, negative $6 to some customers. If people would rather pay $6 for a game without the DRM than pay $0 for the game inextricably bundled with the DRM, even a corporate executive could do that math without screwing it up.
Of course, if you opt for Origin instead, I guess that also sends the message that you don't value your control over your computer any more than $6.
8 comments
[ 4.3 ms ] story [ 29.1 ms ] threadBut still, had so much fun playing this on my 68030 back in the day (just before Apple made the 68K to PowerPC transition...)
That's the irony of the Mac processor switch: it's usually easier to run an old game in DOSBox or a Windows VM than to run a classic MacOS or PowerPC OS X game.
EA has failed its race. It has failed itself. It has failed the human it knows as the customer. The gamer, its playmate, it has failed. Its heart has not been valiant enough, its marketing has not been skilled enough, and it has failed the true gamers.
In fact, that would send a very clear message to EA that their DRM is worth, at best, negative $6 to some customers. If people would rather pay $6 for a game without the DRM than pay $0 for the game inextricably bundled with the DRM, even a corporate executive could do that math without screwing it up.
Of course, if you opt for Origin instead, I guess that also sends the message that you don't value your control over your computer any more than $6.