Nightdive’s Larry Kuperman Retires, Leaving a Clear Statement on Game Preservation
Original: Nightdive's Larry Kuperman retires after 25-year career in games: "We never looked at games as products" View original →
A hot r/pcgaming post this weekend links to PC Gamer's report on Larry Kuperman's retirement from full-time work in the games industry. On paper, it is a personnel story: Kuperman is stepping away after a 25-year run that took him through Stardock, GameStop, and finally Nightdive. In practice, it reads like a compact philosophy statement from one of the people most closely associated with the modern remaster boom and the idea that old games should remain playable, legible, and historically intact.
PC Gamer's interview with Kuperman at the Game Developers Conference is useful because it explains what Nightdive's work has actually meant behind the scenes. Remastering is not just a matter of making an old executable boot on a new GPU. A large part of the job is untangling rights, locating ownership, and figuring out whether a studio is even legally allowed to touch a forgotten classic. Kuperman pointed to cases like No One Lives Forever as a famously stubborn rights knot, and the System Shock story remains a telling example of how strange the chain of ownership around older games can become.
What Kuperman wanted to finish
- He said part of the timing around retirement was wanting to see Sin Reloaded and the long-promised System Shock 2 remaster move through the finish line.
- PC Gamer also highlighted the financial discipline behind honoring old commitments, including work tied back to promises Nightdive made years ago to backers.
- Kuperman said he still plans to remain active with the IGDA, so the move is a step back from full-time studio work rather than a total disappearance from the field.
The line that best captures his outlook is also the one that explains why so many players reacted to the story. Kuperman said Nightdive never looked at games as products, but as art that deserves to be preserved. That is not a sentimental aside. It is effectively the operating logic behind why Nightdive spends time on archival extras, rights recovery, and careful remaster work instead of treating old catalogs as disposable nostalgia inventory. In a market where layoffs have dominated the industry conversation since 2023, that framing lands differently than it would have in a healthier cycle.
Kuperman's retirement therefore matters beyond one executive changing roles. It draws attention to the kind of labor that keeps older PC history accessible in the first place. Preservation work is technical, legal, editorial, and commercial all at once, and Nightdive's recent reputation was built on balancing all four. Whether the studio keeps the same tone without him will only become clear over time, but his parting message is already clear enough: a remaster is not only a revenue opportunity. Done properly, it is a commitment to the medium's memory.
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