OpenTTD asks people to please stop being mad at Atari for forcing the game off Steam: 'OpenTTD as a project retains its full independence,' and you can still get it for free

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We warned you last week that the window was closing on OpenTTD, the open source remake of Transport Tycoon Deluxe that was, until quite recently—*we warned you, bro*—available for free on Steam and GOG. The reason, the OpenTTD team explained, was the imminent return of the real Transport Tycoon Deluxe, the 1995 business sim developed by Chris Sawyer, which Atari was bringing back as a commercial product.

Sure enough, all happened as it was foretold: Transport Tycoon Deluxe launched, OpenTTD was pulled, and everyone took it about as well as you’d expect, which is to say not well at all. Transport Tycoon Deluxe is currently weighed down with a “mostly negative” user rating on Steam, and reviews helpfully suggesting, for instance, that Atari—and I quote—"can, and should, eat my entire ass.”

That negativity isn’t likely to have too much of an impact on Atari’s future financial planning—there are only 26 user reviews on Steam and the peak concurrent player count is just 23, so it doesn’t appear as though Transport Tycoon Deluxe is flying off the shelves here—but even so, it’s causing quite a stir among the small but committed OpenTTD fan base. And now the OpenTTD development team is asking everyone to knock it off, because they say Atari has been very cool about the whole thing, and you can still get the game for free anyway.

“Atari approached us to explain their plans for the Transport Tycoon Deluxe re-release, and what it might mean for OpenTTD,” developer Owen Rudge explained in a new Steam update. “They are keen to work with us, and hope that the new release will be welcomed by the community who have been playing OpenTTD for the past 20+ years.

“We discussed these plans, and we understood that a compromise would be needed to balance Atari’s commercial interests (which of course they are entitled to pursue as the rights holder) against the availability of a free, well-developed evolution of the game.”

Agreeing to collaborate with Atari on their re-release not only enables you to go back and play the original game as it was in 1995, but helps to ensure OpenTTD remains a thriving project for years to come.

Owen Rudge, OpenTTD dev

That compromise was to limit access to OpenTTD on Steam and GOG to people who purchase Transport Tycoon Deluxe, while continuing to make the open source version available for free via the OpenTTD website. So yes, OpenTTD is still available for free, just not on Steam or GOG. Rudge said they decided not to pull OpenTTD from those storefronts entirely in order to avoid “unnecessary disruption” for people who’d already claimed it there, and also to help it maintain visibility going forward.

“The OpenTTD project owes a lot—indeed, it owes everything—to Transport Tycoon Deluxe and to Chris Sawyer. Without TTD, there would be no OpenTTD—it’s as simple as that,” Rudge continued. “As I covered in 2024, OpenTTD started off as a pretty much perfect clone of TTD, and though the game has evolved almost beyond belief since 2004, it is still rooted in the fundamentals of Transport Tycoon Deluxe.

“Agreeing to collaborate with Atari on their re-release not only enables you to go back and play the original game as it was in 1995, but helps to ensure OpenTTD remains a thriving project for years to come.”

Atari also agreed to “make a contribution” toward the costs of maintaining OpenTTD’s server infrastructure, Rudge added.

I’m not one to hand it to corporations, and there’s no question that Atari has a few memorable blemishes on its record: NFTs is the obvious big one, and I’m still not sure what anyone was thinking about those hotels. (On the other hand, it was a good sport about the whole Soulja Boy thing, which I thought was nice.)

But it seems to have found its footing in more recent years—it’s working with Jeff Minter again, there’s a Bubsy game that somehow might not suck, and (this one is actually important) its handling of Nightdive Studios following the 2023 acquisition seems fine, actually—and in this particular instance I’d credit Atari with being more than fair. It’s not uncommon for publishers to full-on cease-and-desist projects like OpenTTD to protect their commercial interests, but in this case Atari is allowing OpenTTD to continue to be offered for free, just not on Steam or GOG. It also links to OpenTTD on the Transport Tycoon Deluxe Steam page. That seems pretty damn solid to me.

Not everyone agrees, naturally. Some people in the responses to OpenTTD’s update express thanks for the clarity and even a bit of gratitude to Atari for being cool about it, but many others continue to be unhappy with Atari for being “greedy,” committing “extortion,” or messing with the open source community in some way. There’s also a healthy sampling of “f**k Atari” with no further elaboration or supporting commentary.

Rudge acknowledged that some people in the OpenTTD community might still “have strong feelings” about the change, but emphasized that “Atari have worked collaboratively with us, and that OpenTTD as a project retains its full independence.”

“Even after reading this, you may still not agree with the choices that we’ve made, but I would please ask you to share your views respectfully,” Rudge concluded. “The Transport Tycoon community has been a source of joy in my own life for well over a quarter of a century, and it would be fantastic for us to be able to continue to enjoy these brilliant games well into the future.”

If you want to play Transport Tycoon Deluxe as it was originally envisioned in 1995, you can pick it up for a tenner from Steam or GOG. If you want the free OpenTTD, which is free, you can get it for free at openttd.org. It remains free.

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Corporate Greed ruins everything.

Capitalism. Capitalism is corporate greed. It’s institutionalized greed.

I don’t think it’s capitalism per se.

A lot of the concepts that underpin capitalism (in the more definitional sense) have existed for thousands of years.

That being said, American style “Big C”, Capitalism reminds me of the Soviet Union (I am from Eastern Europe); not in the specifics, but existential propaganda styling.

It’s capitalism.


Capitalism is stages.

In its larval form it is small business capitalism which is easy to justify because it produces a lot of innovation and ideas and distributes money somewhat effectively.

This is the stage of capitalism that would be acceptable if there was a policy way to control it. I am not sure there is though and it has never been done before.





Stop being mad? Atari abandoned it, someone stepped in and freed something like it for the masses, now they kicked a legally distinct game off steam and want to appease us by paying funding a cheap AF server to let them host on so they can sleep at night charging $9 a head?

I’m afraid they earned their bad press willingly.

Atari abandoned it,

Atari bought the IP in ’24 and decided to start flipping tables.

well double fuck them then




Steam removed it from library despite saying it wouldn’t be. I filed and ticket and it was back mysteriously


Does Atari have any legal leg to stand on? My only guess as to why they’d have any legal right to force OpenTTD off of Steam is that OpenTTD still uses original Transport Tycoon graphics and/or text, or at least a derivative work thereof. It doesn’t seem like OpenTTD copied any of Transport Tycoon’s code, so it must be other stuff like graphics or text.

The legal system “works” like this: if you have enough lawyers that sends enough mail with fancy letter head, you can do whatever the fuck you want.


I’m also confused about this.

in this case Atari is allowing OpenTTD to continue to be offered for free, just not on Steam or GOG

Am I missing something? Just checked on the website, and OpenTTD doesn’t include original TTD’s assets — they can be added separately by the user. So OpenTTD should be impervious to any claims of copyright infringement, and in fact it had to be from the start, otherwise it couldn’t be licensed under GPL or any other open-source license

P.S. Although, come to think of it, I never delved into the legality of reverse engineering, and apparently the US law is not too permissive: the EULA overrides the default assumption that it’s okay, and many programs’ licenses have stock language forbidding reverse engineering. Idk about TTD specifically.

Yeah, it’s possible OpenTTD is only scared of Atari on the basis that OpenTTD doesn’t have the resources to fight even a completely spurious case.

Edit: Someone in another thread suggested it might be that the OpenTTD folks are in breach of EULA provisions prohibiting reverse engineering and that might be what legal justification Atari would have if they did bring this to court.




I don’t get why this is even a problem. Why would you install this game through steam? Just go to https://www.openttd.org/ and download it.

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Additionally, as part of the discussions we held, Atari agreed to make a contribution towards the running costs of our server infrastructure. We are also extremely grateful for the many donations that have come in over the past few days from users - your support will help keep our services going, and it is deeply appreciated.

Ahhh, okay, there it is.




I also honestly don’t see it as that big of a deal if OpenTTD is available for free.

The one thing that comes to mind is the removal of the earlier (community) Steam version of OpenTTD.



Simutrans is still on steam.

I’m not trying to convert anyone over to it because it plays very differently than OTTD. It’s mostly that I’m heavily involved in the Simutrans community and it’s nice when any of these types of games make the news. Even for bad news like this I guess.

Hopefully they figure out how to resolve the situation and get everything set back up because it would just be dumb if they didn’t. OTTD it’s such a classic game and it deserves to have more players. Same with Simutrans.


Today I found out Atari still exists. It poped directly on my hate list, unfortunately.


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