Disney has pulled another batch of games from Steam without warning. Fifteen titles disappeared from the storefront, ranging from forgotten movie tie-ins to beloved LucasArts-era Star Wars classics.
The removed games include Star Wars Dark Forces (Classic, 1995), Star Wars Rebellion, and Outlaws: A Handful of Missions (Classic, 1997) from the LucasArts catalog. The rest are mostly Disney movie tie-ins from the 2000s and early 2010s: Bolt, Chicken Little, Disney Alice in Wonderland, G-Force, Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End, Pixar Brave: The Video Game, Disney Princess: My Fairytale Adventure, Tangled, Disney Universe, Treasure Planet: Battle of Procyon, High School Musical 3, and Planet of the Apes: Last Frontier.
Some of these titles have also vanished from GOG. Star Wars Rebellion and Dark Forces (Classic) no longer show purchase options on the DRM-free storefront, though only the newer Dark Forces Remaster remains available.
The removals seem to follow a pattern. Dark Forces was delisted after its remaster launched, suggesting Disney prefers selling a single updated version rather than maintaining the original. Rebellion has compatibility problems on modern Windows systems, which may have made it more trouble than it’s worth to support.
Many of the movie tie-ins likely face similar issues. Games built for Windows XP and DirectX 9 can be fragile on current operating systems. Add expired licenses for music or likenesses and low sales volumes, and the business case for keeping them listed gets thin.
What you can still do
Anyone who already owns these games can still download and play them through Steam or GOG libraries. Delisting removes the purchase button but doesn’t revoke access for existing owners.
The practical impact hits new buyers hardest. These titles are now harder to acquire legally, especially with both major PC storefronts removing them. Physical copies exist for some games but often come with their own installation headaches on modern hardware.

