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And it wouldn't be the same without you all.

Almost 7 Years
Just about 30,000 Wishes Added
Around 3,980,000 Votes Cast
And over 1,000,000 Votes Fulfilled

The Community Wishlist is one of the things that makes GOG.com tick, because no matter what, we're always working hard to listen and deliver. Whether it's games, website features, or GOG Galaxy development - the Community Wishlist is always the first place we look, and it's proven time and time again to be our favorite bargaining chip on the quest for new games and a better GOG.com. With just a tad over one million wishlist votes fulfilled, we want to take this opportunity to look at just a few of the wishes we got to take on.





Out of all the games in the world, several stand out as most highly requested. <span class="bold">System Shock 2</span> at 36,000 votes was one of our first major conquests - this is the game that really paved way for the most fantastic retro releases and, back when we needed it most, showed how much demand and excitement there can still be for the classics. Who knows, perhaps there is more legendary horror lurking right around the corner, hackers.
<span class="bold">The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind</span> at 25,000 votes just joined our gang alongside the earlier Elder Scrolls titles and more Bethesda goodness - but that's not all the wishlisted games, not by a long shot. With your help we checked off the <span class="bold">X-Wing</span> and <span class="bold">TIE Fighter</span> series, <span class="bold">DOOM</span> & <span class="bold">Quake</span>, <span class="bold">Sam &amp; Max Hit The Road</span> and way, way more.





Bit by bit, we're improving GOG.com - adding new features, and changing things up. Across the years we've added and [url=https://www.gog.com/wishlist/site/add_linux_versions_of_games]Linux support (and then changed the Linux icon) to your games, introduced little things like update notifications, [url=https://www.gog.com/wishlist/site/change_log_in_game_library] change-logs, and the ability to mark your games as completed (and many other tags). The community wishlist was also one of the many reasons we began working on GOG Galaxy.





There's still a lot of work ahead of us, and there are a ton of things in progress: we're still hunting for more, and more, and more classics, we're working on making GOG Galaxy the best gaming client you've ever used, and we're still actively seeking a specialist who can hook us up with some more time (a few hours per day would be nice) to do all that. All of this, while we continue to be a DRM-free store today, tomorrow, and forever!





The community wishlist is a great way for you to keep us aware of your needs, and it's an equally powerful tool for us to react, and to prioritise the future. So if there's a game you've always wanted, a great idea for the site, or something that's been bugging you for ages - don't hesitate, make a wish or cast your vote. It might just become our next big project.
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MarkoH01: Unfortunately you also changed things nobody ever wanted which worked quite well before. So much for the community wishlist. Maybe we should add a "please never change" wishlist, too?
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hedwards: Indeed, they sold out on basically all their principles in the process. I'm not sure people really wanted that.
If you two are referencing mainly to "regional-pricing" alongside few other pricing-related variants, they were simply things GOG.com-team had to apply mainly both due laws and make contracts with publishers.
Either GOG.com would have abided with these necessary changes, or other than not having these games for sale in the first place, we'd might have GOG.com going out of business due law-suits and such (E.G. any type and sort of tax-evasion is utmost serious-offence almost anywhere in the Tellus / Earth).

GOG.com-team already is using a semi-loophole by giving you the the credits to your personal "Difference-wallet", so in the end everyone pays the same price technically.

But this is a "dead-horse"-topic(s) that many people seem to refuse educate themselves about (even though they're pretty much basics of any consumer-knowledge nowadays; granted, not all schools teach these things to less than 15-years-old kids; also granted that I personally started educate myself about business-world when I was 6-years old, to which I blame my single-parent-mother and farmer / entrepreneur-father of mine, alongside of course all the business-management-simulation-video-games...)...
Post edited September 18, 2015 by PaveMentman
Thx for all the great gaming hours.
You've fulfilled a lot of my wishes and made my day more than a few times!
Never thought to have DRM-free Versions of "Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis", "I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream", "Star Wars: Dark Forces" and many others.
Keep up the good work!
P.S.: I hope "Laura Bow II: The Dagger of Amon Ra" will make it to your catalog!
Congrats to GOG. Thanks for providing us with more games than we could ever hope to play in our lives.
Cough *Dex* Cough
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hedwards: Indeed, they sold out on basically all their principles in the process. I'm not sure people really wanted that.
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PaveMentman: If you two are referencing mainly to "regional-pricing" alongside few other pricing-related variants, they were simply things GOG.com-team had to apply mainly both due laws and make contracts with publishers.
Either GOG.com would have abided with these necessary changes, or other than not having these games for sale in the first place, we'd might have GOG.com going out of business due law-suits and such.

GOG.com-team already is using a semi-loophole by giving you the the credits to your personal "Difference-wallet", so in the end everyone pays the same price technically.

But this is a "dead-horse"-topic(s) that many people seem to refuse educate themselves about (even though they're pretty much basics of any consumer-knowledge nowadays; granted, not all schools teach these things to less than 15-years-old kids...)...
You're one to talk, in this post alone you're writing off the regional price difference via the difference-wallet, which is at best a loophole.

But, they used to be about old games, now they've got not just new games, but movies as well. The region-free pricing is toast, but there's also games coming here that have no goodies. For a while they were putting DRM in their downloads so that it was impossible to extract the files from the .exe files without using an approved OS.

I'm sure there's other things, but those are the ones that spring to mind. GOG sold out on basically all their principles from early on.
Thanks GOG... and keep them coming!

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GOG.com: <span class="bold">System Shock 2</span> at 36,000 votes was one of our first major conquests - this is the game that really paved way for the most fantastic retro releases and, back when we needed it most, showed how much demand and excitement there can still be for the classics. Who knows, perhaps there is more legendary horror lurking right around the corner, hackers.
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real.geizterfahr: System Shock 1 confirmed!
No, it's TES IV: Oblivion! They're surely talking about those intra-dimensional lurking Daedra Lords :P.
Post edited September 18, 2015 by WinterSnowfall
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GOG.com: Who knows, perhaps there is more legendary horror lurking right around the corner, hackers.
Infocom backlog confirmed!
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GOG.com: Who knows, perhaps there is more legendary horror lurking right around the corner, hackers.
System Shock (1) confirmed!

;o)
woo-hoo!
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Grats, and keep up the good work!
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PaveMentman: If you two are referencing mainly to "regional-pricing" alongside few other pricing-related variants, they were simply things GOG.com-team had to apply mainly both due laws and make contracts with publishers.
Either GOG.com would have abided with these necessary changes, or other than not having these games for sale in the first place, we'd might have GOG.com going out of business due law-suits and such.

GOG.com-team already is using a semi-loophole by giving you the the credits to your personal "Difference-wallet", so in the end everyone pays the same price technically.

But this is a "dead-horse"-topic(s) that many people seem to refuse educate themselves about (even though they're pretty much basics of any consumer-knowledge nowadays; granted, not all schools teach these things to less than 15-years-old kids...)...
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hedwards: You're one to talk, in this post alone you're writing off the regional price difference via the difference-wallet, which is at best a loophole.

But, they used to be about old games, now they've got not just new games, but movies as well. The region-free pricing is toast, but there's also games coming here that have no goodies. For a while they were putting DRM in their downloads so that it was impossible to extract the files from the .exe files without using an approved OS.

I'm sure there's other things, but those are the ones that spring to mind. GOG sold out on basically all their principles from early on.
You seem to have short term memory issues. Within the last year, they've added Disney/Lucasarts classics, Bethesda, numerous D&D games, Star Trek games, etc. They're still very much about old games, we simply have more options. I'm all for the ability to buy new games DRM-free.
Post edited September 18, 2015 by DrearierSpider
Thanks for the all the hard work you've done and are doing.
It's great to see, how many DRM-free games landed here over the years.
(I whish you would add Siege of Avalon :D)

May library grew a lot in the last years xD

Great job. Keep it up. °-°d
Worth a smile while heading into the final day before my weekend :)
Thanks for keeping it classy GOG.
Congrats, GOG, and thank you. Keep those wish fulfillments coming.
Very cool to see this acknowledged. :) I didn't personally want a free game, but it would have been an opportunity to show up Steam and Origin.
Well done GOG great work.

I'm always astonished at the publishers you get on board. Disney, Bethesda, Warner brothers etc. Plus some older games that aren't on Steam or don't work on newer systems. Hence the reason i joined & DRM Free. (can't believe i forgot that part)

Hope you've got big Games or a publisher in time for christmas ;)
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DrearierSpider: You seem to have short term memory issues. Within the last year, they've added Disney/Lucasarts classics, Bethesda, numerous D&D games, Star Trek games, etc. They're still very much about old games, we simply have more options. I'm all for the ability to buy new games DRM-free.
What does that have to do with my statement that they sold out on all their principles? They did fold on the DRM they put into the installers, but the principle was that they'd never do it. Not that they'd take it back if there were an outcry.