Sufyan: I see the problem here: The FREE milk turned out to be regular milk, not chocolate milk.
While I won't completely disagree, it's absolutely
standard anymore for a higher end video card to include a game or two, it's the baseline. So, the
industry standard milk was white instead of chocolate.
The main difference is that it's long since been part of the purchase, it's not so much a "free" thing anymore, cause if company A isn't offering it, 15 others will be and people will pass them up for it. It's like buying a new phone that only comes with a USB charger, when you don't have any USB capable devices. (unlikely I know, but bare with me). You
can use it, but you have to go to your friend's house, your parent's, the library... it's just really inconvenient that you can't use the product that was included - industry standard - with what you bought, the way you want to use it, ie plugging it into the wall, or playing the game on Steam.
I'm not saying that the company shouldn't advertise a little, bring the user to GOG, but it could give you the option of redeeming here, or getting a Steam key for the game.
I just want to use Steam myself. I have games on Origin that I don't play, because it's not Steam. I don't know if there's anything wrong with Origin, I just don't feel like dealing with it for the few games I do have on there. The same is true with GOG. I don't know how the service is, but I'm not really interested in finding out. It honestly sounds a lot more complicated, "owning" the game, downloading things, dealing with patchers and lauchers like it's the 90's again.
TPR: GOG.com gives you FREEDOM but you're complaining because there is no "golden chain" like on Steam. For free people chain is a chain and its color (obviously fake) doesn't matter while it's permanently holding you with one "landlord" (slave master).
Maybe steam has a "golden chain", but I like all of the things that you were complaining about TPR. DRM; it doesn't affect me because I buy the games. "Renting" them because you can be banned; well the people who are banned are people cheating in online games, and as a player I like that because it heavily discourages it!
And as a game developer, I WANT some DRM, and I WANT cheater banning. If I make a game a specific way, it's because that's how I think it should be played. If it's single player, go ahead, ruin the game for yourself, I really don't care. But if it's online, don't ruin it for everyone else.
Steam does hardware surveys, sure, but they ASK about them, a few times a year you can opt in via a popup. They do a DRM check to see if the right files are present (and unmodified) for the game you're gonna play, but I would consider neither of those things spying. And if they do something more, I truly don't care, I don't have anything to hide.
And as far as freedom goes, freedom means doing whatever you want, including opting into "slavery". As a free person, I don't mind walking beside the chain, because it protects me. I'm not tied to it, I'm not a real slave. The chain guides me, and it makes playing games very easy. I used to pirate everything, and if there's any real freedom, that's it. But true freedom is anarchy. Getting most pirated games to work is a nightmare, yes because of DRM. Do you think they should be pirated easily? I don't.
The Sims 3; every time you wanted to install a new expansion, if you did one little thing wrong (which was likely since you'd only do this once every few months), you'd have to completely uninstall EVERYTHING Sims 3 related, then install all over, cracking them in the right patterns and what not. Crazy annoying, but I did it 11 times, each time harder than the last. Why? Because I didn't want to play it on Origin, and I don't think it's worth the price. And I don't support EA either.
GOG is fairly close to a truer freedom, where you're pretty much left to your own devices, messing with everything on your own, dealing with patching the game on your own, modding the game on your own. I don't like that. I like getting on my computer and seeing "Oh, Space Engineers did it's weekly update! Let's just click this button to read about it. Nice, cool stuff, let me press this button to play the game. Awesome, I'm playing."
But even if GOG was that easy, I'm already attached to Steam. It would have to have all of Steam's notable quality of life improvements, and beyond, to ever elicit interest from me.
And if you're wondering why I'm replying on GOG forums if I don't care about it, I wanted to know if I could purchase Witcher 3 from here - to fully support the developer, CD Projekt RED - but get a Steam key so I could have it and play it on my preferred platform.