Ancient-Red-Dragon: I'm not believing the OP's assertion unless I first see independent verification of it being true.
Probably what actually happened is that the games are still on his HDD or SSD, and the EGS client just fails to see them.
So in other words, most likely the original post is spreading incorrect misinformation.
Huh? I'm not about to just crap out information without trying to validate it first. I immediately checked my data the moment I didn't see any games in the client, my first thought was 'oh it's just lost track of the install locations'. But no, I had Arkham Knight on my SSD and Arkham City/Asylum on my main HDD.
Games are gone. Confirmed.
Gudadantza: As it is said in the post above, probably there is some kind of misundertanding because it is not very reasonable that the unninstal of a client vanishes the games themselves even if they were installed in the default route.
Epic actually does let you set an install directory per game, As I said to ARD above, I had the three Batman games installed in different locations, with Knight on SSD using epic's default location choice, and the other two on a secondary 4TB HDD, there is no confusion, they were all entirely removed along with EGS.
What I mean is, I back up the game, and whenever an update happens, I test it without the client active to make sure no dodgy changes have happened before replacing said backup.
Breja: It's this kind of nonsense that allowed DRM to take over gaming in the first place. "Yea, it sucks, but what can I do? I
have to play this game! I'm
forced to use it! It's not my fault! We live in a society!"
I'd agree with this statement if the Arkham series wasn't DRM free on EGS, that was
soley the reason I went for them. I would never have even considered them otherways, nor would I ever have bought Ghostbusters on there if it hadn't been confirmed DRM free.
GOG has become a frustrating platform to support and I am not the only one who was seriously starting to think they would never get the Batman games at all. But you're right that it's not actually GOG's fault, I'll admit my wording was hyperbole based on emotion from losing my save data, all I could think of at the time was 'if this was a GOG release, my data would still be intact'.
pds41: Steam does the same:
https://support.steampowered.com/kb_article.php?ref=9609-OBMP-2526 Interestingly, Steam also not only does a Scorched Earth on it's installed content, it also then salts the Earth by deleting it's install folder without asking you (along with any other files you've put in there - most uninstallers ask before deleting files that weren't part of the install package).
...and people are ok with this?
Mister.Wolf: Doesn't Epic have cloud sync for the savegames?
It does, but as I never want to let myself become reliant on internet features I disabled it. Yes I can see the irony in that.