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Valve Releases Updated Alien Swarm For Free With Code Base

baronvoncarson tips news that today Valve released an updated version of Alien Swarm, a popular Unreal Tournament 2004 total conversion mod. The creators of the mod were hired by Valve, and they've helped turn it into a stand-alone game running on the Source engine. Valve is also releasing the code base for Alien Swarm and an SDK. The game is available for free on Steam.

5 of 164 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Free by Peach+Rings · · Score: 0, Troll

    Oh I'm sorry, I meant Nexuiz!

    Nexuiz says it's a Quake 1 engine modification, but those menu widgets and fonts look awfully familiar.

  2. Re:Nightblade by keatonguy · · Score: 0, Troll

    Someone who's capable of discerning the topic at hand.

    --
    If you aren't angry, you aren't paying attention.
  3. Re:Free as in beer; comes with required crapware by KillShill · · Score: 0, Troll

    That's like saying "Genocide done right".

    All DRM is evil, period.

    In fact, STEAM is one of the worst forms of DRM that exists... it uses the "boil the frog" technique to lull the public into a false sense of security. But at the end of the day you still have to get permission each time you want to play (no, offline mode doesn't count because 1. it expires after a while and 2. you still have to get STEAM's permission to enter into it in the first place). And the cherry on the top of it all : it eliminates the first sale doctrine. I did hear about how STEAM(Valve) will kindly take your 10 dollars in order to "transfer" a game to someone else...

    STEAM is the single most onerous form of DRM out today. The only thing which could top it is Trusted Computing (though that's coming too, but in piecemeal , so as not to disturb the frog).

    --
    Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
  4. Re:Free as in beer; comes with required crapware by guruweaver · · Score: 0, Troll

    While you are correct in that you cannot install games without teh intert00bs, you can certainly play them without connectivity. Steam's offline mode is quite good. It also keeps the games patched, which is nice. Valve still has some work to do in smoothing out their "cloud[1]" feature, used to sync your saved games between computers, but it's a step in the right direction. Particularly for someone like me who travels a lot for work. Play at home on desktop -> saves go into "cloud" -> continue where I left off on laptop. Mike [1] Hate that word, cloud. "New media" marketing BS for "It's on servers outside of your premises." Bah.

  5. Re:A solution begging to be put to use ... by hedwards · · Score: 0, Troll

    Just because it's free doesn't mean that it's OK to torrent it. Which is a wee bit silly, but I think the main reason for that is that there's no way that Valve can know whether or not the torrents have been tampered with.