Posted October 08, 2017
high rated
If I understand how things work correctly, publishers make contracts with the various stores that they sell their games in and presumably a part of such contracts are often if not always words to the effect that the publisher can't sell their game elsewhere under conditions that are more favourable to some other store. If a publisher has entered into such a contract on Steam for example, and they have regional pricing there, then they would be obligated by the contract they've signed with Steam for example to have the same pricing on any other store they want to sell their game on. If this is the case, their choices are to have the same deal on GOG, or to be unable to sell their game on GOG without violating their contract with Steam. We never got that level of detail a few years ago when Nordic temporarily stopped selling their games here at GOG as such details are really private business matters that are none of our business at the end of the day, but enough was said to read between the lines that something of that sort or similar caused Nordic to have to pull their games temporarily. Presumably their contract ended and when they made a new one they changed the wording or whatever so that they could again sell their games at GOG and not have contractual conflicts between the stores.
What we as customers see however is games come and go, or not come at all with little explanation of why, and the reason there is little explanation is IMHO not because any of these companies have some big secrets to hide, but because they have legal contracts with each other and must act in a professional matter to maintain their trusted relationships with one another, and blathering the low level details of private business deals with the general public is a good way to piss off partners if not to outright violate a legal contract or NDA that was in place as a part of a deal.
We might not get all the details that we'd like to know about things, but lets face it - no matter what information we do get, we'll always want more and it's not reasonable for any end customer to expect a business to share every private detail of their business, contracts, etc. with the general public, at least not IMHO.
Like anyone, I wish we knew more about why a game isn't here, or when it might be coming, what the sales figures are for a particular game or the whole store, or any other number of details. Regardless of our endless quest for knowledge however, at the end of the day we're not entitled to know all of the detailed behind the scenes legal or other business of a given company. Every company including GOG, is not going to publicize something they are under a legally binding contract to not disclose to the public, including any potential business contracts etc., and they're not going to disclose anything to the public that could be advantageous to competitors to know in advance, nor any material insider information that could be valuable to securities traders, nor anything that has potential risk to their business to publicize for any reasons actual or perceived.
Some people might not realize it, but it is possible to be disappointed about not getting more information without being angry or jumping into conspiracy theories or other negative drama. :) At the end of the day, if someone doesn't trust anything bigger than themselves, they'll always look for theories of being repressed in some manner or another. From where I sit, the only thing it's good for though is popcorn sales. :)
What we as customers see however is games come and go, or not come at all with little explanation of why, and the reason there is little explanation is IMHO not because any of these companies have some big secrets to hide, but because they have legal contracts with each other and must act in a professional matter to maintain their trusted relationships with one another, and blathering the low level details of private business deals with the general public is a good way to piss off partners if not to outright violate a legal contract or NDA that was in place as a part of a deal.
We might not get all the details that we'd like to know about things, but lets face it - no matter what information we do get, we'll always want more and it's not reasonable for any end customer to expect a business to share every private detail of their business, contracts, etc. with the general public, at least not IMHO.
Like anyone, I wish we knew more about why a game isn't here, or when it might be coming, what the sales figures are for a particular game or the whole store, or any other number of details. Regardless of our endless quest for knowledge however, at the end of the day we're not entitled to know all of the detailed behind the scenes legal or other business of a given company. Every company including GOG, is not going to publicize something they are under a legally binding contract to not disclose to the public, including any potential business contracts etc., and they're not going to disclose anything to the public that could be advantageous to competitors to know in advance, nor any material insider information that could be valuable to securities traders, nor anything that has potential risk to their business to publicize for any reasons actual or perceived.
Some people might not realize it, but it is possible to be disappointed about not getting more information without being angry or jumping into conspiracy theories or other negative drama. :) At the end of the day, if someone doesn't trust anything bigger than themselves, they'll always look for theories of being repressed in some manner or another. From where I sit, the only thing it's good for though is popcorn sales. :)