However, companies like Activision discovered that the open source nature of DOSBox freely allowed them to make their older catalog titles available again. While companies like id Software and Apogee and 3D Realms were happy to sell from their back catalogs online, their combined output was only a very small portion of games available for DOS. DOSBox had been in development since 2002, but for the first few years the software was still improving to the point where it could be counted on to run most games. While there were narrowly-focused projects to emulate game engines like Exult, Frotz and SCUMMVM, there was no easy to use general solution for playing DOS games. The ability to play DOS games with a sound card was often unsuccessful. Windows XP was generally less compatible than Windows 98SE with DOS games. Getting DOS games to run in the first half of year 2000 decade was often an exercise in frustration. There were also sites like Game Trading Zone, which I used to make a few trades and purchases before it went to a subscriber only format. Occasionally you could find some games in bargain bins or on a compilation CD, but generally speaking, if you wanted to purchase a DOS game, you went on ebay or a similar site. DOS games were no longer generally being sold commercially, with certain exceptions, at retail after the 1990s.
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