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With Borderlands 4 nearly here, a community of archivists are racing to revive a dead Borderlands MMO
With Borderlands 4 nearly here, a community of archivists are racing to revive a dead Borderlands MMO.
This roughly 30-minute video contains a detailed summary of how much work the small team had done, multiple extensive explanations that the project was not breaching 2K or Gearbox's copyright, and how there was no intention to profit from releasing a build. This video concludes on a request for help, with the initial team running into a wall of work they doubted could be cracked open before Borderlands 4 neared release and lawyers would be more aggressive with takedowns on such projects. It's a reminder of an earlier desire by 2K to push into the Chinese market, long before we saw the development and purchasing power of that region made manifest with games like Black Myth Wukong.
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