"Funcom knows we exist," the anonymous dev admitted. "They haven't sent a C&D yet. I think they know that the people playing here would never play Legends . We aren't lost revenue. We are archivists." Is it ethical? Is it legal? In the ephemeral world of abandoned MMOs, those questions often dissolve in the face of sheer passion.
Enter the emulators.
When Funcom pivoted to Secret World Legends , they added a new combat system and a reticle targeting mode, but they lost the soul. They simplified the lore-heavy investigation missions. They made the game easier to monetize but harder to love. the secret world private server
One player, LoreKeeper_42 , explained why they refused to play Legends : "It’s the atmosphere. On the official server, you can teleport everywhere instantly. You get a big arrow pointing you to the quest objective. Here? We have to walk. We have to read the quest text. We have to use the /reset command when we fall off the fucking agartha branch for the tenth time. That is the game." Of course, this world exists in a fragile state. Funcom (now owned by Tencent) has historically been quiet on the private server front, likely because the original game is effectively end-of-life. However, the legal risk is a sword hanging over every developer's head. "Funcom knows we exist," the anonymous dev admitted
Unlike Star Wars Galaxies or City of Heroes , which have explicit legal "gray areas" and non-profit charters, The Secret World is still technically a live product—even if that product is a zombie wearing a different skin. We aren't lost revenue
For the purists, the scholars of the bee, and the tinfoil-hat wearers, that wasn't salvation. That was desecration.