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I would also advise against spamming this thread/post across forums.
ONLY the IP holder for a product can state terms or choose where they want to sell it. Imagine this scenario - you create a product, let say, a piece of music. You choose to not just upload it to certain streaming sites, but you physically have some vinyl copies made to distribute through stores.
YOu find a local store that takes a load off you, sale or return. They then decide they're not going to charge what you want to sell them at and jack the price up threefold. You don't sell any.
Now imagine how pissed you'd be.
The same applies here. Because if you own the IP rights, you control what is done with it.
However, the chances of these coming here are extremely limited simply because they weren't released on PC in the first place to my knowledge. These were both console games. I just check gamefaqs to make sure, and they seem to think so too.
So, not onyl is it down to the original creators and most likely Disney, but it would need redeveloping or a wrapper creating so the emulation would run. And I don't imagine Sony or Nintendo would be too happy about that.
Which is wrong...
Cars for example was developed and published in a partnership of THQ and Disney while The Incredibles was developed by a combination of Indie-Studios and published by THQ; the only role Disney had in that one was holding the licenses.
The PROPERTIES (original source material IP) might be similar in that they originate from Pizar but that's where the similarities end.
You have two major problems - likely different developers, and if they've gone kaput (or no longer do this work anymore as Disney used to outsource all their games back then) then the source code might not even be around.
The second and biggest problem you've got is as I said before - they WERE CONSOLES ONLY games. You can't just miraculously pop them on a PC. It just doesn't work like that.
So here's the problems you have:
- Disney might not see any validity in going over these old games (they will know their marketing data)
- The original devs might not have the source code and without that there's no way to bring them across
- Even if the original devs do have this source code, if Disney have no interest, they cannot do anything about it anyway, even if they wanted to.
- No PC port exists anyway.
So you are as likely to see those on PC as Legend of Zelda or Metroid.
They were console games. See for yourself:
https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/search?game=incredibles