218 pointsby Bondi_Blue9 hours ago32 comments
  • 0xC0ncord8 hours ago
    About one of my favorite racing games of all time: "The game could have been removed for a number of reasons, including the closure of developer Bizarre Creations in early 2011, but the most likely cause was expired licensing of the real-world cars featured in the game."[1]

    To me this is one of the most egregious examples of how licensing massively hurts consumers. The game is fully playable offline (and online with a patch) but cannot legally be sold because of an arbitrary restriction limiting the use of likeness of virtual cars in the game.

    [1] https://delistedgames.com/blur/

    • captn3m06 hours ago
      The title track of the game, Smile by Crystal Method [0] is one of my all time favorites as a result of playing Blur.

      [0]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EbkSMPbj_I

    • reddalo7 hours ago
      +1 for Blur, great game, it's like Super Mario Kart for grown-ups.

      Too bad the only way to get it is by pirating it. But in these situations, doesn't piracy become morally acceptable?

      • embedding-shape6 hours ago
        It becomes a moral imperative to pirate it and continue seeding it for others to also acquire, as a mean to help preserving something you cared about, apparently more than the owners of the IP/rights themselves care.
      • olyjohn3 hours ago
        Wow this looks pretty rad, I wish I knew about it before! Having real cars in the game really makes it more fun to me. I dunno why, but playing racing games with a bunch of fake cars isn't as exciting (Super Mario Kart being an exception). It's especially fun when you see one of your cars, or a friend's car in the game.
    • godzillabrennus2 hours ago
      Blur is my favorite racing game of all time. I keep a sealed copy of the 360 version in my home as a little homage to the fun I've had with it.
    • wilg3 hours ago
      This is the double edged sword of copyright, sometimes you want the artist to have control, sometimes you don't.
      • wavemode3 hours ago
        People generally always want the artist to have control.

        What people don't want, as in this case, is for a corporation to have control of the artist's work, and exercise that control mercilessly, thus actually reducing the reach and impact of the artist's work.

        (Often, unknowingly to the corporation's own detriment. Having your cars appear in a game is literally free marketing, why refuse that?)

        • TylerEan hour ago
          The engineers at the car company that designed the body in the first place are also artists.
          • wat1000015 minutes ago
            They have as much control over this as I do, i.e. none at all.
    • dom967 hours ago
      oh yeah, I'm a fan of this game too. To my surprise, even though it's delisted I can still install it. That's certainly better than the alternative.
      • reddalo7 hours ago
        I think you can install games that you bought (when they were available), even if they're delisted.
      • dark-star5 hours ago
        yeah, that's the whole point, thye still let you install the games you bought because not doing so would open a huge can of worms and re-start the whole "are you really buying games on steam or just renting them?" discussion, which they are very keen on avoiding
  • shantara7 hours ago
    Prey (2006) https://delistedgames.com/prey/

    Great game, with some innovative level design involving portals and gravity manipulation. Delisted back in 2009 and impossible to acquire legally to this day on PC.

    • Apes7 hours ago
      I've got this game in my steam library, and I wondered why no one ever talks about it. I never realized it was delisted and made impossible to buy so long ago.
      • ganoushoreilly6 hours ago
        The original story was definitely unique and a fun play on 360.
        • hombre_fatal6 hours ago
          Until I looked it up, I almost thought my memory of it was the Bernstein effect especially since there’s a 2017 game by the same name and much more popular.
          • debugnik5 hours ago
            The sequel to Prey (2006) was stuck in development hell for really long until they finally scrapped it, so the publisher placed the trademark on a completely different but similarly themed game instead.
    • rjh292 hours ago
      The intro and first level is one hell of a ride. Had no idea it was delisted but that explains why nobody's talking about it...
    • jordand6 hours ago
      There's a set of licensed music in the game that's likely another reason too sadly. Pretty unique game for the time and I'd redeemed it on Steam from the cd key in a used physical copy I bought dirt cheap.
  • AnotherGoodName8 hours ago
    It's funny that 3 different Space Hulk games are here.

    I actually thought Space Hulk (2013) was amazing but it's hard for a developer to keep up the yearly license payments on any Warhammer franchise. So it's not available for purchase anymore. It got ~75% on reviews on release but i like the board game and it was true to the board game so i personally loved it. Link on the steam store (the site should have these) https://store.steampowered.com/app/242570/Space_Hulk/

    Fwiw if you have one of these games they are still in your Steam library. I still get to play the above game. I just can't easily play with others anymore nor can i suggest they purchase that game. I'm a little surprised it still runs fine given no updates but yay for backwards compatibility.

    In general a theme for lists like these are licensing. If a developer has to pay a franchise licensing fee it's going to stop being worthwhile at some point. Take note if you're a developer. It's hard to get visibility without being tied to a franchise (Eg. Larian had to do it with Baldurs Gate 3) but it'll cut into profits massively. Even Larian are never doing it again.

    • bee_rideran hour ago
      Possibly this is a hot-take, but: Divinity Original Sin 2 was better than Baldurs Gate 3. The combat is so much better (DnD combat in a video game is always too swingy, the system relies on having a sentient DM who can make a story happen even after you critical fail). The things people like about BG3 (the story and characters) could have been done just as well Larian’s system. DnD probably hindered the actual quality of the game.

      But, the DnD IP really got them a massive audience. I’m glad they got a hit, they deserve it. Looking forward to see what they do with their own system and a massive budget.

    • NooneAtAll37 hours ago
      I've had negative opinion on company behind Warhammer ever since Emperor TTS debacle

      everything I've heard since only confirms that that universe would be better dead and never be talked about

      • Sabinus6 hours ago
        I've been noticing a bit of 'totally not Warhammer but grimdark and space marines' settings being used more these days.

        Void War game on Steam is a notable one.

      • reactordev7 hours ago
        Henry Cavill would have words with you. There are some extremely die-hard fans in the U.K. just like there are die hard fans of Star Wars here in the US.
        • jandrese6 hours ago
          Lots of people love the Warhammer universe. Far fewer people love Games Workshop as a company.
          • reactordev6 hours ago
            Just like there’s lots of people that love Star Wars and far fewer that love Disney?
            • jandrese6 hours ago
              Or even George Lucas.
      • the_af6 hours ago
        What was the debacle?

        I doubt the 40K universe will die any time soon, it has many fans and they are hardcore about it. And it's becoming more and more mainstream (relatively).

        • hibikir2 hours ago
          The "If the Emperor Had a Text-to-Speech Device" youtube series, which was in some ways one of the best pieces of Warhammer content made in years, had to be stopped because GW gave the author a cease-and-desist.

          I think that their approach to fan uses of their IP is far too tight, and that they'd actually be making more money if they had, say, just licensed it. A bit like how they actually harmed their own hobby videos quite a bit with their reactions to their on-air talent leaving to go independent. Nowadays GW is the last place you'd go for painting videos, and the popular content they still have is old, and created by those people that left. But given the way the law works, they are within their right to manage things badly.

          Just this year, I hear a very large percentage of the people that were in their external creators network decided to give up the early access, because the restrictions had become way too tight, even for simple things like people painting their miniatures.

          • the_af2 hours ago
            Ah, thanks for the info.

            Yeah, GW shenanigans. Like you said, people like the universe they created, not the company and its draconian practices.

  • jandrese8 hours ago
    Mostly seems to be games where the licensing deal expired or the company folded. I was expecting to see a few more from the adult category that got delisted because someone noticed TOS violating material and reported it.

    There was a recent video about Horses, which admittedly was a pre-release, but was technically available for download and is now gone. It is not on this list.

    • duskwuff8 hours ago
      Yeah, brand licensing seems to be by far the most common reason for games to be delisted. A couple of other common ones seem to be:

      1) Server shutdowns for multiplayer or live service games

      2) Breakdowns of developer/publisher relations

      3) A remastered version of the game was released

    • TechSquidTV7 hours ago
      Idk how common it is anymore, but one game (which seems to be missing from this list) I know was removed from Steam after the early access launch from a Kickstarter campaign. The developers essentially quickly ghosted the game after the EA, considering the Kickstarter complete and taking their money. It was seen as a pretty big scandal in the early days when we had some standards.
  • wk_endan hour ago
    One of the more interesting ones is the Taiwanese game Devotion:

    https://delistedgames.com/devotion/

    Taken down because a background poster depicted "Xi Jinping Winnie-the-Pooh moron".

  • syncsynchaltan hour ago
    Oh, it includes the Abuse-like HL2 platformer that I played while waiting for HL2 to install, apparently named "Codename: Gordon". https://delistedgames.com/codename-gordon/

    I'm glad I found this, as it includes a steam:/ URL that lets me re-install it if I'd like to play it again.

  • Shorel7 hours ago
    Great resource. I have a fair number of them purchased.

    -- Back to the Future: The Game

    -- Blur

    -- Crysis

    -- Dark Souls

    -- Dirt 2

    -- Dirt 3

    -- Dirt Showdown

    -- F1 2010 - 2015

    -- F1 Race Stars

    -- Grand Theft Auto 1, 2, 3, San Andreas, Vice City

    -- Grid (2019)

    -- Metro 2033

    -- Prey (2006)

    -- Project CARS

    -- ToCA Race Driver 3

    -- Transformers: War for Cybertron

    -- Transformers: Fall of Cybertron

    In most cases the games were delisted because of expiring licenses for cars, tracks, music, or studios being purchased by another studio.

    It's a bit sad as I consider Crysis and GTA to be an important part of gaming history.

    • benoau7 hours ago
      It's all gaming history and a sadly-overlooked part of "Stop Killing Games".

      The worst part is the licenses that do exist are non-transferrable, so by the end of this century there will be zero licenses left for these games. They'll just be expunged until they become public domain perhaps in the middle of the next century - if any copies survive.

      And what's sad about that is we know for a fact games can survive and be enjoyed for decades, because we have seen this occur for the entire lineage of game-playing machines.

    • breakin232 minutes ago
      Do all of these still work?

      Is Steam obligated to continue to support old games until they no longer exist to support them, or can they stop supporting them at any time?

    • TitaRusell7 hours ago
      Same reason why Ace combat will never get a remake.

      If you use real brands in your videogame you as a developer need to know that it's on a death clock.

      • HNisCIS2 hours ago
        I despise that licensing is a thing in video games. They're an art form and you should be able to depict whatever you want. I don't care if Porsche, John Deere or Sig Sauer get their feelings hurt because someone made art.
        • voidfuncan hour ago
          If you call something a Porsche, John Deere, or a Sig Sauer and inaccurately represent it you're doing brand damage especially in the modern era where it could become a toxic meme on TikTok or whatever.

          That's no good and should be prevented.

          Developers could pony up for perpetual licenses if they cared but they don't.

          • xkcd196333 minutes ago
            I'm sure perp licences are more expensive, also nobody should be forbidden from using brands for artistic purposes. If a company licences the color "red" for their branding and it henceforth requires licencing for use they can shove that idea up their rear
      • dghlsakjg7 hours ago
        Or just sign a licensing deal that doesn’t expire?
        • zomiaen6 hours ago
          That presumes you can find someone to agree to those terms (which you won't), and if they do, that it isn't a prohibitively expensive fee (which it would be).
        • Uvix6 hours ago
          No licensor is going to do that.
          • WillPostForFood2 hours ago
            There are only 1,038 delisted games out of 100,000+ games on Steam, so there are willing licensors. Some may offer perpetual licenses, but want a royalty. It might be easier to delist a game than to manage the ongoing paperwork.
            • Uvixan hour ago
              Most games don't have that sort of licensed content to start with, so comparing to the total population of games isn't meaningful.

              Offering a perpetual license would limit the licensor's options (e.g. they could never offer someone else an exclusive license, nor could they adjust the rates if the brand becomes more popular, nor could they terminate if the developer/publisher becomes toxic), so I guess while it's theoretically possible I just don't see why they'd want to offer such a license.

    • jaapz6 hours ago
      At least the GTA games and metro 2033 are still available for purchase on steam, just the remastered versions. When they released those, the older versions were delisted
      • shantara5 hours ago
        Rereleased GTA games have a lot of iconic music removed from their radio soundtracks due to expired licenses.
        • neckro23an hour ago
          At least for the PC versions of Vice City and San Andreas, the originals are missing the music too. A bunch of licenses expired 10 years after release and the Steam releases got updated accordingly.
        • doublerabbit3 hours ago
          It doesn't feel the same playing GTA4 without the music.
  • vunderba8 hours ago
    I initially assumed this was related to the delisting of NSFW related games on Steam due to payment processor pressure as a result of the Australian group Collective Shout.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_Shout#2025_Steam_an...

  • bananaboy6 hours ago
    Ahh, there seems to be a distinction between "delisted" and "purchase disabled". This is a list of all games which are no longer available on steam along with the reason: https://steam-tracker.com/
  • FloorEgg7 hours ago
    I was surprised to see that StarForge wasn't on this list, and after looking into it I think it's because after it was delisted someone else published another game named StarForge. I wonder how common that is.
    • somat3 hours ago
      What are the uniqueness requirements for titles, For the most part people are reasonable and don't want to stomp on each others names. however there are bad actors and this is usually where trademark law comes into play to help protect the name, but does steam impose additional uniqueness constraints on top of this?

      That might be a fun list, games with the same name.

  • bananaboy7 hours ago
    This can’t be all of them. My business partner and I delisted our tiny (unsuccessful) indie game after we wound up our company and our game doesn’t show up here.
    • embedding-shape5 hours ago
      Ultimately, all the datasets on Steam are scraped one way or another, since Steam themselves don't seem to publish it. I could be that they simply never came across your project before you delisted it, and of course after delisiting it I don't think they'll ever come across it.
      • bananaboy2 hours ago
        Hm yeah. We removed it a few years ago now so I assume they should have found it though. We followed these instructions and had to contact valve and give a justification https://partner.steamgames.com/doc/store/retire_app I don’t remember the details of the form but maybe there were options and one amounts to being delisted and another amounts to just no longer being visible and available for sale.
    • LorenDB5 hours ago
      The nice move in this scenario would have been to make the game free instead of delisting. Gamers can still enjoy it, and you don't have to worry about income once the company is closed.
      • bananaboy2 hours ago
        It actually is free on itch.io, and people on steam who bought it still have access to it. Keeping it on steam required us to maintain our company registration which we didn’t want to do since it’s a waste of money and time as we weren’t planning on doing anything more with it.
  • ekipan6 hours ago
    I'm sad that Platine Dispositif pulled their games. Chelsea Has to Beat the Seven Devils to Death (known more widely in English as Bunny Must Die) was a lot of fun and one day I'd like to play some of their others, but they mostly seem to just release on Switch and Playstation stores in recent years. Their site[1] is getting pretty bitrotted, and their blog has an entry from a month ago[2] talking about their next game displayed in Digital Games Expo 2025. I don't immediately see any mention of Steam or intent to return anywhere.

    These are in Japanese of course.

    [1]: https://www.platinedispositif.net/

    [2]: https://murasame.hatenablog.jp/entry/20251130/1764507793

  • debugnik6 hours ago
    Lost Planet 2 was delisted in 2021 because it can't be played without patching out Games for Windows Live.

    The delisting was supposed to be temporary until Capcom removed the dependency, like they did with other titles on the same engine, but so far they haven't bothered restoring this one.

  • lurker_jMckQT995 hours ago
    What does "delisted" mean in this context?

    - are they preventing new purchases?

    - are they preventing the players who purchased the game prior to the delisting to play them at all?

    - both? something else?

  • amiga3865 hours ago
    Seems to have delisted but not unlisted games (e.g. https://store.steampowered.com/app/302850/Team_Indie/ "At the request of the publisher, Team Indie is unlisted on the Steam store and will not appear in search.")
  • some_random4 hours ago
    The older Metro games are of note, while they're available as the Redux versions there are a surprising number of non-graphical differences between the original THQ published versions and the graphical updates.
  • markx28 hours ago
    If you want to follow and get notice : https://steamcommunity.com/groups/RemGC

    "This is a place for those who have a moderately large collection of removed games (games no longer available for purchase on steam) to gather. For most, this group will just be about the name, showing off that you own what others no longer can. For others, it can be a resource to find what you once believed could no longer be found."

  • ivolimmen8 hours ago
    I loved Blacklight Retribution. It's been so long delisted that my most unique achievements from it disappeared from my profile. One was 0.01% of all players.
    • Zambyte6 hours ago
      It's surprising that it doesn't seem like the X-ray mechanic (which is the main thing I remember from that game) was really picked up by any other game. There were way fewer cheating accusations than in other games, because what would normally be a "cheat" was a core game mechanic, and IMO that made it really enjoyable. It's a shame that game died.
  • RobRivera7 hours ago
    I just want Poker Night, and Poker Night 2 :(
    • bombcar24 minutes ago
      Of those are at the Inventory; they’re good.
  • smcl7 hours ago
    Jesus I thought it'd be obscure games but I randomly scrolled down and saw Duke Nukem games, a bunch of the F1 series, Jet Set Radio, Lumines, Mafia III, MultiVersus (don't care about this I just remember _so many_ people being paid to stream this, there was a lot of money behind it) and Wolfenstein (2009). I had no idea this was so prevalent
    • kgeist7 hours ago
      >Mafia III was delisted from Steam on May 19th, 2020 when it was replaced with Mafia III: Definitive Edition

      >Lumines was delisted from Steam on June 22nd, 2018. The delisting coincides with the release of Lumines Remastered just a few days later

      So there's a tactic of delisting a game to promote a remastered version.

      • smcl7 hours ago
        Fair enough
  • gegtik8 hours ago
    DiRT games hit hard
  • throwatdem123118 hours ago
    Transformers: War For Cybertron, Fall of Cybertron, and (especially) Devastation.

    Three games I will cherish in my Steam Library (and my physical PS3 copy of War for Cybertron). Anything Transformers based since these have been mediocre at best.

  • Y_Y8 hours ago
    See also Stop Skeletons From Fighting's Delisted series: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL-ak-oNNRK_vBhwW22i0h73AR...
  • Rzor7 hours ago
    Transformers: Fall/War of Cybertron went away and never came back. I'm still waiting...
  • agentifysh8 hours ago
    interesting i bought bloodrayne a long time ago

    if i delete it i lose the game right?

    • grumbel7 hours ago
      No, the games just disappear from the shop and can no longer be bought via Steam. When you are already own them, you keep them. Third party seller might sometimes also still sell remaining Steam Key inventory and thus offer a way to activate a delisted game on Steam.

      One area where content can disappear is music licenses, those often don't result in a complete delisting of the game, but just the music getting patched out of the game. In those cases, the music would be gone for everybody, as Steam game updates are mandatory and you can't downgrade the game to a previous version either. Unofficial mods will sometimes address this issue and add the music back in.

      • Fluorescence5 hours ago
        > Steam game updates are mandatory and you can't downgrade the game to a previous version either.

        For Crusader Kings III, the old versions are listed as betas (cog -> properties -> betas) so you downgrade by "signing up to a beta".

        I don't know if it's a common practice but pretty damn necessary for paradox games. A single game might take months and their attitude to backwards compatibility is "new versions will corrupt your game files in ways that only subtly reveal themselves like noticing the King of England owns a county in Mongolia before reaching a game year that will always crash".

      • duskwuff7 hours ago
        > Steam game updates are mandatory and you can't downgrade the game to a previous version either.

        You can usually download old versions from the CDN using tools like steamcmd. Developers can remove the old depots, but usually don't.

    • AnotherGoodName8 hours ago
      No these games still install and run via steam just fine.
    • throwatdem123118 hours ago
      The are delisted for purchase but still available to download from Steam’s CDN for the Steam client. I own 3 delisted Transformers games but was able to reinstall them recently.

      Tangentially related but even though the Nintendo 3DS e-shop has been shutdown for years you can still download your purchased games through your download history.

      I was very happy just last week I was able to redownload Monster Hunter 3 Ultimate for my 3DS despite the store being down.

      It gives me at least a little bit of confidence that having some games as part of a digital library on the Switch and Switch 2 will be easily available for the foreseeable future.

  • 8 hours ago
    undefined
  • jokoon8 hours ago
    death stranding is in there

    I remember that many games I had in my wishlist became "blank" or removed, and I was unable to know what games were those

    • haunter8 hours ago
      It was superseded by the Director’s Cut edition. So you can buy DS but not the original launch edition

      That’s actually a case with a lot of games on the list that got a remake, director’s cut, upgraded edition etc.

      • jandrese7 hours ago
        This site has a tag for games that get relisted, but it really needs one for games that got remastered as well. It's a bit misleading to say a game is gone when you can still buy the GOTY version.

        Really, it would be nice if every listing had a 1 or 2 word tag that summarized the reason for the de-listing.

        Publisher Closed

        Servers Shut Down

        Remastered

        License Expired

        TOS Violation

        That sort of thing.

      • 7 hours ago
        undefined
  • TechSquidTV8 hours ago
    It's missing The Stomping Land
  • user39393828 hours ago
    We should just setup a review portal at the Dept of State, Visa, MasterCard, maybe moms against drunk driving, a few others, and devs can sanity check their game idea before submitting to steam
  • kgwxd8 hours ago
    I bought my 2 yo a copy of Rocket League when they announced it would only be available through Epic (no Linux support) once it went F2P, just in case he was going to get into it. Best game in the world, but I'm not subjecting myself, or my kid, to Windows and the Epic store just to get at it.

    I'm quite surprised Epic hasn't done something to kill off the Steam version yet, but I expect the recent bot problem is going to give them the "justification" they need to put EAC in it. Even if it "works" on Linux after that, I'll be in constant fear that my account, with hundreds of dollars into the game, will get banned without recourse.

    • fao_7 hours ago
      > Best game in the world, but I'm not subjecting myself, or my kid, to Windows and the Epic store just to get at it.

      Quite right! I really don't blame you, given the direction that Windows has taken in the last decade, and especially the last few years. The LLM integration is bad enough (Kids and LLMs should not mix, IMHO), but he adverts in the start menu could be anything. I've had some very explicit 18+ adverts on a social media platform twice this week, despite not engaging with that kind of thing at all, and the best I could do was report them.

      > I'm quite surprised Epic hasn't done something to kill off the Steam version yet, but I expect the recent bot problem is going to give them the "justification" they need to put EAC in it. Even if it "works" on Linux after that, I'll be in constant fear that my account, with hundreds of dollars into the game, will get banned without recourse.

      For what it's worth, Easy Anti-Cheat is supported and doesn't ban you for using Linux.

    • b40d-48b2-979e8 hours ago

          subjecting myself, or my kid, to Windows and the Epic store just to get at it.
      
      Subjecting is a weird word choice here considering most of us rely on using Windows in some fashion in our education or work. Which OS or store you use is not your identity and EGS takes a significantly smaller cut from developers, so I prefer to buy there when I can as I don't care for social features from Steam aside from the workshop on some games.
  • pedrohlc5 hours ago
    I love how they decided to sell a new Mortal Kombat arcade collection instead of removing GFWL and reinstating the older one. /s
  • cwmoore7 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • Skyy936 hours ago
      When you bought a game and it becomes unavailable, due to delisting, you care.

      It shows a general problem we have with online license's for movies, series and games. You buy the product and at some point later in time you loose access because something changed outside of your control. This is different from VHS/CD/DVD/BluRays where I can use the product even years after purchasing, despite a company loosing the license or simply not existing anymore.

    • 0_gravitas5 hours ago
      Why even leave this comment?