Microsoft Vista Charged With Breaking Games

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Just 24 hours after the lavish launch party for Vista , a former Microsoft engineer has charged that a glitch in the new version of Windows makes it impossible to run hundreds of popular online and downloadable games. “Hundreds, maybe thousands, of games are broken — even on Microsoft’s own site,” says Alex St. John, now CEO of WildTangent, which distributes games to PC manufacturers and via its own Web site.

St. John, who led Microsoft’s efforts to ensure that older games were compatible with Windows 95, said the root of the problem is in Vista’s heightened security features. Simply put, the software doesn’t seem to differentiate between noxious “malware” and innocent games. The software’s parental control feature, for example, screens out family-friendly games that aren’t rated, he said, adding that getting a grade from the Entertainment Software Rating Board is a hefty expense for smaller developers.

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