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As we all find some time to relax after a year of hot releases and big sales, we thought it would be fun to look back and give you a short recap of GOG.COM's Winter Sale and listen to your opinions on the event.

Our annual Winter Sale ran for 23 days this time (from December 11th, 2019 to January 2nd, 2020) with almost 3,000 deals for games, including completion bundles and special game collections. One title, Lost Sea, had the highest discount amount them - coming in at 95% off!

If you followed the entire Winter Sale, you were also able to claim four free games (Wasteland 2, POSTAL 2, POSTAL: Classic and Uncut, and Tower of Time), and eight more games through GOG Connect if you already owned them on Steam. These offers were super popular and we're always very happy when we can give you such gifts.



Behind the scenes of the Winter Sale
While our Winter Sale has a lot happening on the front end, what is not usually visible is all the work that goes into making it happen, not only weeks before the sale (like discount approvals and designing the takeover images) but also during the event. We were constantly evaluating the performance of the sale, updating the front page based on hard data and our gut feeling, while listening to your feedback, for example, to help you discover the best deals.

A new option to hide DLCs in the catalog was also introduced during the sale (which we're still testing and improving) and should help you in the future when searching for games on sale. We also gathered and shared our recommendations and suggestions with you through a series of promo pages with the best deals, top-rated games, and more. It shouldn't be a surprise that the Good Old Games themed selection was the most popular one!

Another new element of this sale was the featured newsletters that included special limited-time offers. We've been testing this format for some time now and we can see that a lot of you enjoy it, especially the fact that these newsletters allow us to offer you higher discounts than usual. It's worth it to subscribe as there are plenty more cool offers to come!



The Winter Sale is also a very busy time for our Support team (pictured above!). The number of support tickets in December grew by 70% in comparison to the previous month and by 40% in comparison to December 2018. We usually send the first response to your tickets within 24 hours but that time grew to approx. 37 hours in December 2019 while our whole Support team kept working basically around the clock. This is why we want to thank you for your patience as we're currently clearing our backlog trying to resolve every ticket.

Finally, let us share a few technical facts regarding the Winter Sale. Our IT and Web teams kept a close eye on the website performance to make sure that the front page is loaded faster than it did during the prior year, even though we put even more games on display. To make sure of that, we doubled the number of servers during the Winter Sale. December 30th turned out to be the busiest day with six times more traffic than usual. At the same time, our daily data transfer for game downloads was 2.5 times higher. You played a lot of games during the holidays!

Oh, and between all that, we somehow managed to squeeze in our annual Christmas party and make a special Blade Runner cosplay photoshoot in our office :)



What a year it was!
Overall, we want to thank YOU for participating in our Winter Sale. Next to the Summer Sale, it's the biggest event of the year for us and we already can say that our recent sale was by far the biggest Winter Sale in the history of GOG.COM Store. A perfect conclusion to a year full of exciting game releases and events!

What are your impressions regarding GOG.COM's Winter Sale? Which games did you buy? Would like to read more look back articles like this one? Let us know in the comments below!
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MrFortyFive: I like this look back article too, or any sort of "behind the scenes" look. Keep those coming!

Thanks, GOG!
this one
When we will be able to sort by price ?!?
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sharonbn: When we will be able to sort by price ?!?
Not just regular price but a sale price and specific ranges. I want to be able to search for games that cost between $9 and $9.51 if I want to.
Bought a handful of games, possibly to lift the Christmas Spirit.

Other than that...
/looks at photos/ BEWARE OF GUNS IN THE OFFICE!!!
Thank you for sharing some "behind the scenes" stuff, it's fun to read! :)
There are a couple of things I noticed.

With 3000 games on sale, the sort and filter functions are just not enough to find the games that you want. To flip through al the pages takes too much time, so I didn't do that. Yes, the collections helped a little bit, but not much. I would have loved to sort by price and/or filter by price range.

Two more filter options would be "nice to have":

An option to filter by games designed for less powerful machines and esp. laptops would be great! As many other parents I have to watch over the little one while the baby is asleep. This can be boring at times and I do enjoy a casual game at the time. Therefor I'm specifically looking for games with low specs, which currently is tedious as the specs are only visible after clicking on the game. I would have bought more games in the past and possibly a bunch I would otherwise not consider, if only it was possible to filter by (low) system requirements.

Also an age specific option would be interesting. I would love to filter games that are suitable to be played with younger kids, and/or filter games for adults.

Speaking of laptops, there were so many tracking pixels, scripts, cookies and marketing tools on the frontpage that the shop didn't load in GOG Galaxy on my laptop at all and instead I had to use Firefox with Adblock and NoScript as it was otherwise impossible for me to use the website. Scale it back a little, guys and gals. Please?

Also, 2 of the 4 free games offered during the sale are region-blocked and we had no access to them. I know this is not GOG's fault, but it wasn't ideal.
Tower of Time was a blessing, thank you.
This was a fun little article to read. I almost feel bad for not buying anything during the Winter Sale. Most of my wishlist was on sale, but I had just bought so much during the Black Friday Sale that I couldn't bring myself to basically double my backlog. Hopefully I will have whittled down my backlog a bit before next time so I can continue to support GOG.
The sales were amazing. To be candid, I did not have the money to purchase any games, which was unfortunate, as some of them I have wanted for a while. I am hoping to be able to do so the next sale, or maybe even sooner.

The free games you offer during sales is always generous and appreciated.

The newsletters are great! I have purchased some games via that format.

The behind the scenes is nice.

Keep up the great work GOG!

Edit: Fixed typos.
Post edited January 16, 2020 by Stryder2931
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MrFortyFive: Freebies and Connect games are always welcome, and such a huge release like Blade Runner in the middle of it was a great surprise. All that kept me checking in regularly to see what was going on.

I like this look back article too, or any sort of "behind the scenes" look. Keep those coming!

Thanks, GOG!
Agreed! The behind the scenes is way cool!
You guys absolutely rock!
Besides the Cyberpunk release do I look forward in particular to the improvement of the Galaxy launcher and new releases from the game wishlist. :)

Please also keep up the habit of letting your customers know if a game has to go of your site for whatever reason and allowing people to get a copy before it's gone, like you did e.g. with the old Fallout games waaay back.
Luckily this happens quite rarely. But because it is rarely it would be worth a broadside email from you guys to ensure nobody misses it for sure. Vielen Dank. :)

I think one of the classics I would love to see the most on GOG would be the Myth game series from Bungie and the two Mechcommander games with all cutscenes. Oh well, one can at least dream.
I wish GOG everything well for 2020 and don't let all the nay sayers for CP irritate you. You got a lot of practical experience with the Witcher franchise and you will also give your best with this new one. Tell Pondsmith I would love to see him giving you also his 'Mekton Zeta' license. ;)

Be well.
Bearhug67
Post edited January 16, 2020 by Bearhug_at
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GOG.com: What are your impressions regarding GOG.COM's Winter Sale?
It was a nice sale; thank you for all the freebies! Also, i noticed that a new filter (Hide DLC) has appeared: it made it somewhat easier to browse through the discount. Nice work on that -- a "Price Ascending/Descending" filter would be nice too.
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GOG.com: Which games did you buy?
Civilization IV, a gift key for Alpha Centauri and Gothic 2 & 3.
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GOG.com: Would like to read more look back articles like this one? Let us know in the comments below!
Of course; the more the better.
The hide DLC filter is good, I'd add an option to show only DLC for games you own too. Stopping using Google on the website would be a definite improvement although I can't see that happening. Come to think of it, no spyware or telemetry in games would, for me, be as good as no DRM is. The "behind the scenes" look was interesting and thanks for the free games :-)
Post edited January 16, 2020 by HappyPunkPotato
Photos are here if anybody isn't already aware: https://www.gog.com/news/a_look_back_at_the_2019_winter_sale
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GOG.com: ...
I hope 2020 is the year we finally get more Humongous games - Spy Fox (priority imo), Freddi Fish, Putt-Putt - but I imagine the hold-up is Retroism and not GOG (though of course Pajama Sam didn't exactly sell amazing :p)

(and yes I'd enjoy more articles like these, so we can feel some connection to the staff like back in the old days)

Anyway, good work GOG! I was especially happy to see the re-considerations of rejected titles and hope that continues for profitable titles.

I hope the site keeps improving (I guess what many want is an option to sort via current lowest price, as iirc price sorting doesn't currently take sale price into account?) and you keep find ways to automate all that you can to free up resources. And I hope you're able to whack down more games from the 2nd-class citizens list, especially those missing important patches. (similarly I hope you grow more and more so you have more leverage to dictate terms with devs and pubs.)
Post edited January 16, 2020 by tfishell
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sharonbn: When we will be able to sort by price ?!?
Sorting by price is not so simple and requires extremely advanced analytics. Prices are constantly changing, so the prices' order changes many times during a year! To properly sort products by price you need many employees, each of whom holds a card with the current price; then you need sophisticated coordination to put everyone correctly in the row and finally write down the order. This is easily done in large corporations like Steam. But GOG is relatively small; they don't even have enough employees to assign all price cards! Of course, you can try to computerize this process, but that would require powerful computing power and, again, a lot of money. I'm sorry. I don't think it'd be possible in the decade.