Drastic has been around for a long time and for a good while was the best supported one. It was definitely worth the flat, one time $5 charge that I paid like 10 years ago.
But realistically speaking, the dev hasn’t actually done much work on it in the last few years beyond bug fixing, and the insistence on the keeping it paid hurt the ability to sideload it when you needed to. It should have been free a long time ago, especially after it got so much competition.
This timing is very interesting with the Yuzu/Citra shutdown - do you suspect the change has anything to do with not want to make money from a Nintendo emulator as be less of a target? Or is there something fundamentally different about Drastic?
I will add that I don’t mind if on top o the flat date there is a few years of free updates until you have to renew your license, as long as you can keep using your “outdated version “ for as long as you want. I see this model in many professional íve used over the years (Sketch or Affinity apps for example) and I find it very reasonable because I understand that ongoing development requires investment.
Drastic has been around for a long time and for a good while was the best supported one. It was definitely worth the flat, one time $5 charge that I paid like 10 years ago.
But realistically speaking, the dev hasn’t actually done much work on it in the last few years beyond bug fixing, and the insistence on the keeping it paid hurt the ability to sideload it when you needed to. It should have been free a long time ago, especially after it got so much competition.
This timing is very interesting with the Yuzu/Citra shutdown - do you suspect the change has anything to do with not want to make money from a Nintendo emulator as be less of a target? Or is there something fundamentally different about Drastic?
Yeah, he had a blog post that says exactly that.
Thanks for the followup!
definitely sounds like the dev got spooked
I will add that I don’t mind if on top o the flat date there is a few years of free updates until you have to renew your license, as long as you can keep using your “outdated version “ for as long as you want. I see this model in many professional íve used over the years (Sketch or Affinity apps for example) and I find it very reasonable because I understand that ongoing development requires investment.