
to start with, I really can't see the point of digging up this auncientte threadde of yore.Īnd can you please try and be a little more polite there ? This restrictive nature (ahem, DRM) is part of the reason why I will never run vista outside of a virtual machine. Stop trying to go the microsoft way and tell us we can't do things on our own systems because you just end up sounding like a complete $%#&ing idiot. This is most laughable when one poster here said he dual boots so it's the same hard drive and someone still said that's illegal. How mnany of you have run 3.1 or earlier era basic win games?Įver run 3.x's reversi on xp? Oh no, it's copyrighted too, head to the police station and turn your self in NOW. I have NEVER heard anyone saying this same sort of rubbish of the basic games that came with previous windows. We're talking copying the basic games that come over a private lan, or another part of the same hard drive, and such, for personal use. Just try it once and let us know your thoughts.Honestly, those of you saying "copying it is illegal" really need to get a grip here. So, it’s time to revive those nostalgic games on your brand new Windows 11 OS. Play Windows 7 Games on Windows 11Īlthough Windows 11 does not ship with games that aren’t locked to the Microsoft Store, we can play those classic Windows 7 games by installing an unofficial package as we explained above. We tested this on the latest insider version of Windows 11 and didn’t come across any issues except for the internet-based games. Note that the internet games are not working as of now.Įven though the mentioned Windows 7 games package is intended for Windows 10 and 8 it’s working fine on Windows 11 too. Simply select your favorite game and start playing right away!.Once installed on your system, you can access these games by navigating to All Apps > Games.Now select all the games that you want to install and hit Next.After downloading the package, extract it and install the.

