Emulators are always legal - unless there is copyrighted software involved. For instance, a SNES emulator doesn't use a BIOS, so that is perfectly legal as all it is doing is adapting CPU or GPU calls from the SNES software to CPU or GPU calls on the PC (the software you run on it isn't if you don't own a hard copy, but that is another story). However, if you grab a PS2 emulator and don't own a PS2, and nick the BIOS off the interwebs, then that IS illegal (though no one is ever gonna chase you up for it).
Exceptions to this are releases made by the publisher or developer of the games. Sega is one for releasing their old games on new systems, all running in emulators (often derived from OpenSource works if you look in the credits of some recent Sonic re-releases :3). Another example is the POPS emulator on the PSP - the PSX BIOS is inside pops.prx in the system firmware (I think it includes all three main BIOSes, JP, EU and US). The POPS emulator is an official Sony thing, though people found how to package their own PSX games from ISOs, with only about 6 games not currently working through it.
Back on topic... :3
Please please please get rid of the Red Rings of Death. It kinda ruins the thrill of the Shrykull when you have a power that is near identical in practical use (though it does fry enemies, it blows everything else up and probably blows up the enemies nearby).
Another suggestion that is more for an Exoddus remake, but I'll bring it up here - Why are there no chant suppressors in the Glukkon rooms (I guess that goes for the Boardroom in AO as well)? There are suppressors everywhere else protecting Sligs and stuff, but not the top brass? Something is up there, methinks.
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It sounds like it but they haven't - MIDI is never used. Just some sounds and sprites didn't survive being ported very well, especially the jingles and explosion sprites in Abe's Exoddus PC.
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Wait, really? How on earth were Digital Dialect allowed to port Exoddus!? Did OWI even try the PC version of AO that they shat out?
EDIT: Wow, I just realized how mean I'm being to Digital Dialect. It was a poor port, but from what I know the A.L.I.V.E engine wasn't easy to work with, and I'm willing to bet that getting this working on PCs wasn't fun.