Without explanation and without warning, the developers at Our Machinery have announced that they are terminating work on their alternative to Unreal Engine and Unity: an engine they called The Machinery.
The announcement came in the form of an email sent to users a few days ago. «Unfortunately, we've reached a point where it’s no longer possible for us to continue in the current direction,» said the team at Our Machinery, before going on to say, well, nothing by way of explanation.
Instead, the email simply stated that, per the engine's EULA, development would cease, access would be withdrawn, and licences would expire two weeks after the email was sent. Users were informed they would receive refunds and were requested to delete any source code or binaries they had in their possession.
That last bit has proven controversial. Users on Hacker News(opens in new tab) did a bit of digging and found that the EULA had been updated toward the end of July to feature a clause obliging users to «destroy any copies of the Service or Content in your possession, custody or control» upon termination of their licence. That clause was notably not present in earlier versions of the EULA, which are still viewable on the Wayback Machine(opens in new tab) at Archive.org.
In other words, it looks like a new section was added to the EULA only to be invoked a couple of days later. That's permissible under the terms of the original EULA, which allowed Our Machinery to update the terms at their own discretion without prior notice, but it certainly doesn't feel fair. The website, dev blog, and Discord server for the project have also all been summarily nuked, and the Twitter account hasn't been touched since April. That all makes it incredibly
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