A list of new games have been outed as part of EA's public service announcement for game server retirements. Majority of the games are from two years back but one title that stands out as part of the shutdown is...yes,, one of the most popular mainstream niche titles that managed to garner a wide following and tons of subcultural communities.The complete list is on EA's server shutdown page , where the games biting the dust for January, 2013 are as follows:Trenches II for iPad, iPhone and iPod touchThe Sims 2 for PC/MAC and TheSims2.comFIFA Soccer 11 for PC, PS3, Wii & Xbox 360FIFA Soccer 11 Ultimate Team for PS3 & Xbox 360Madden NFL 11 for PS3, Wii & Xbox 360Madden NFL 11 Ultimate Team for PS3 & Xbox 360NBA JAM for PS3 & Xbox 360NBA LIVE 10 for PS3 & Xbox 360NCAA Football 11 for PS3 & Xbox 360NHL 11 for PS3 & Xbox 360NHL 11 Ultimate Team for PS3 & Xbox 360FIFA Manager 11 for PCAs some of you know, for games with online server authentication, when the servers go down it means the game is useless. A coaster for whatever price of entry you paid.Many of the games on the list above are unsurprising, but shutting down servers foris a bit odd given the strong following of the game, not to mention all the expansion packs out there that EA released for the game. Sucks to be aplayer.However, this certainly lends credence to the debates aboutand its always-on DRM. While many non-core gamers and corporate apologists will say that gamers won't be playing games five or 10 years from now, they speak only for themselves. I, for one, still play the original Microposeevery once in a while. In fact, I was playing it earlier this year and the amount of content removed from the newestin comparison to the original is what helped me decide not to buy' game.The real question is: five, 10, 15 years from now...will gamers will be able to play the newest? If it becomes their go-to game – and at $60 a pop it very well should live up to the standard of being a go-to game – what happens when EA decides to retire the server if the sales don't live up to expectations? It's a self-fulfilling prophecy at that point for all those opposed to always-on DRM.Anyway, I really hope the gaming community doesn't let up about this DRM issue. These big businesses are already forcefully removing LAN out of games and then forcing multiplayer through authentication servers, making all forms of multiplayer obsolete when the servers shut down. Further stripping consumer rights with this always-on DRM bullcrap is just icing on the cake and I'd advise every gamer worth their salt to keep the public pressure on these publishers and ignore shills, pro-corporate apologists and PR spiel-spewing marketers. They don't deserve our money if the only thing they're after is our money.