 The Video Game History Foundation and the Software Preservation Network teamed up to do a study and find out just how many classic video games are available for you to legally buy. They found out that 87% of classic video games, which basically means released before 2010, are critically endangered. This is how the study puts it, quote, imagine if the only way to watch Titanic was to find a used VHS tape and maintain your own vintage equipment. And you had to be a library or a museum in order to do it. If you loved Turrican on your C64, I don't see how that should be treated any different over time as a thing to restore, to keep alive, to make sure it's there. Even if it's just to study it and know it, not to mass market it, nobody's gonna mass market Turrican.