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Thanks for all the feedback you gave us after the previous update. You’re awesome and it shows the GOG insights piques your interest. Today’s article is about a topic that we know is very important to you – our commitment to DRM-free gaming and what it exactly means.

GOG was built on trust, which is at the very core of our identity. It is evidenced by our 30-day refund policy or releasing games DRM-free, among other things. At the same time, we understand DRM-free might mean different things to different people, especially when modern games blend offline and online experiences.

When GOG first launched, the gaming market looked very different from what it is now – retail was the main place to buy games, and digital distribution was just taking baby steps. DRM, the copy protection software created to protect licenses against unauthorized disc copying, was a huge source of annoyance for gamers often restricting how they can access their content. From the beginning, part of GOG’s mission was to provide gamers with a simple way to access and play games, without the need to fiddle with files or deal with any DRM. Making sure you can play games purchased on GOG offline, make backup copies, and install them as many times as you need is even more relevant now, as things like game preservation become an important topic for the whole industry.

Today, while some of the most infamous DRMs of the past are thankfully long gone, it doesn’t mean the constraints are fully gone. They just have a different, more complex face.

Games are evolving and many titles offer features beyond single-player offline gameplay, like multiplayer, achievements, vanities, rewards. Many such games are already on GOG and will continue to join our catalog. But it also raises the question: is this a new frontier for DRM?

And this is the crux of the matter. Some think it is, some don’t. Some hate it, some don’t mind it. And to be fair, we didn’t comment on it ourselves for quite some time and feel this is the time to do so:

We believe you should have freedom of choice and the right to decide how you use, enjoy, and keep the games you bought. It manifests in three points:
1. The single-player mode has to be accessible offline.

2. Games you bought and downloaded can never be taken from you or altered against your will.

3. The GOG GALAXY client is and will remain optional for accessing single-player offline mode.


We fully commit to all those points. Aside from this, we reaffirm our continuous effort to make games compatible with future OSs and available for you for years to come.

As for multiplayer, achievements, and all that jazz – games with those features belong on GOG. Having said that, we believe that you have the right to make an informed choice about the content that you choose to enjoy and we won’t tell you how and where you can access or store your games. To make it easier to discover titles that include features like multiplayer, unlockable cosmetics, timed events, or user-generated content, we’re adding information about such functionalities on product pages. In short, you’ll always know.

We always took a lot of pride in the freedom we provide gamers. While we know DRM-free may have a different meaning to everyone, we believe you have the right to decide how you use, enjoy, and keep the titles you get on GOG. With games evolving towards adding more online features, we want you to understand our DRM-free approach and what it means to us. It is an important topic – let us know what you think.
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seppelfred: When a game gets an update, I download and backup it immediately. I don't see the problem here.
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JAAHAS: Just wait until you have doubled your catalog and have better things to do with your time than constantly checking which of the games have received a new update.
I am very happy that I have so much free time to check my updates on a daily basis.
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Power to you, GOG!

As long as you are transparent, you will continue to be my #1 source of games.
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chandra: In regards to your comments around Hitman and if it comes back to GOG – the game won’t be released as a DRM-free title in the same form as offered back in September 2021. As mentioned in the post, we see that games are evolving, and this led us to write this article about our stance on DRM-free gaming. We didn’t comment on those changes and what kind of influence they may have on GOG’s DRM-free approach.
I interpret these weasel words to mean more things like Hitman and worse are coming to GOG. Are the higher ups at GOG really that arrogant to think tradeing their main selling point of being DRM-Free to become more like Steam is a good idea. Even Epic Games cant crack that egg and they're giving away free games all the time. People that are ok with buying games with DRM are just going to buy them from Steam why would they buy from GOG, they would have to be stupid to. If the higher ups can't see this they should pass the torch on to people with common sense.

With these weasel words and your new slimy definition of DRM-Free I am glad I decided to boycott GOG in early 2021. I will continue to boycott gog intill you return to being true DRM-Free no BS. With action not just words this would mean adding the missing content to all single player games on GOG with DRM (16 as of writeing, check "DRM on GOG: list of single-player games with DRM" thread for list). If this happens and one year passes of not forgetting what DRM-Free means I will then happily buy again from GOG.
Having mixed feeligs about this announcement. At last we do know now where we stand.
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IndiePyx: What I would like to see from GOG going forward:

Priority:
- Galaxy for Linux
- All single-player content fully accessible without any need for online accounts/activation.

Secondary:
- If a single-player game has some sort of anti-cheat, make an option to disable it(i.e Elden Ring and its EAC)
- Make the CyberPunk cosmetic items available to non-Galaxy users.
- Controller support and a Big Picture akin to Steam's.
- Crossplay between GOG and other platforms.
Sadly I don't think Galaxy for Linux is going to happen. Steam has totally taken over Linux gaming now and with the arrival of Steam Deck has become the main gaming platform for Linux gamers and might very well bring more gamers to Linux (at least singleplayer gamers).
Without in-built Proton support GOG has nothing to show on this front. As its becoming now clear with games running on Steam Deck the Proton driven games run much better then Wine driven games through Lutris or Heroic Launcher cause they include shader precaching and other Valve fixes that are not avaialable through Wine and in most cases these games run better then on Windows. I wish gog would do something but since they haven't done anything for Linux gaming since the cancellation of Galaxy Linux client I don't think anything is going to change.

The other thing is the problem that even gogs offline installers automatically search for Galaxy and I already had issues where I could not install a gog game cause it wouldn't install without a Galaxy client on Linux. This is a big issue for me.
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elcook: We're continuing to improve GOG and its services (I could mention here the last couple of updates about the new catalogue or the new promo pages as examples), and I can assure you there are more updates to come.
One thing I'd like to add here however, for more context, is that while some of the requests we receive might seem simple, they all require development work, while our Team is focused on delivering other features, at least equally as important.
Another task for gog to look at would be getting back some old drm free games that were on gog earlier but delisted.
For example the Arma games came back to gog except Arma 2 : Combined Arms



21:40
Post edited March 18, 2022 by §pec†re
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Magnitus: So people that are strongly against online-requirements, like you and I, can quickly make an informed decision when it comes time to buy a game without having to do tons of research about it (which I was actually starting to resent personally).

We also know that they won't scrap offline installers.
You see.. There are few problems with this change.

1. Whole purpose behind GOG was that it's a DRM-Free store, a place of collective buying power. In order to sell a game, publisher would've needed to make game DRM-Free. Changing DRM-Free to just "informed decision" destroys this purpose. Publishers no longer have incentive to make games DRM-Free. Contrary, they now have an incentive to make game in a way to be DRM-ed through Galaxy DRM. Just like console games were making multiplayer modes just to prevent customers re-selling discs.

2. As other people in this thread have showed, there are already games, where GOG Galaxy has fresher game build than one provided with offline installer.

3. Main purpose why GOG/CDRP managers is doing this whole change, is because they treat GOG.com as pure brand, and they believe they can make more money for their shareholders. It's not about "informed decision", it's not about making anything good for the customer. It's about abusing customers with new Galaxy DRM that GOG has created(sic!). For the false believe that such change would make GOG/CDPR more money.

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Epilogue
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To sum it all up. 18 march of 2022 is the day when GOG has officially gave up on it's main purpose of existence and sided with ESA publishers mafia, who like to mistreat and abuse customers. They did it, because DRM-Free is "childish" for a "serious" business. While mistreating customers is an "industry standard".

What you can do about it? Download all your games, as it's written in the OP.
2. Games you bought and downloaded can never be taken from you or altered against your will.
Reach GOG's tech support and request to remove your account and delete all your data, as it's legally required by GDPR. Last part is important!
Tell everyone that GOG is no longer a DRM-Free store, but just a brand run by managers who love to abuse customers.


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To all the stuff of GOG
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I know, you are just a workers in the company, and have no say against those destructive decisions. You are nice and cool people who were making great service and game support for all of us those years. Thank you very much for your work and passion you put into this. Thanks for being with us.

Skoal!
rusty_dragon
Post edited March 18, 2022 by trynoval
By the way, may I suggest considering to sell DRM free Android games too? Having to rely on the services of Play Store is a nightmare, but Humble Bundle is dropping their Android offers, Itchio is a wild west of Android games and I don't know any other relatively big stores that can be used as a DRM free alternative for Play Store.
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Xabyer_B: Try to downolad more than 800 games one by one to back up your games, and then come back and say me it's not neccesary an alternative to GOG Downloader.
I've done it with my 550+ game collection.....I downloaded games/extras in batches over the course of a few weeks or so. Yeah, I know some don't have the time/etc, but it is possible.



*Moderated. Please remember to follow Code of Conduct guidelines.
Post edited March 19, 2022 by chandra
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Sad to see that GOG is officially okay with DRM'd single-player content (being cosmetic is no excuse) and that the response to people expressing discontent with that has been to double down and basically let us know that you've made up your mind and don't care what we think.

I hope GOG remembers that they're not authority figures, nor is this store the only notable one for buying DRM-free games. Nobody has to settle for this, we are more than free to take our business elsewhere. A refusal to listen to your customers, to insist that you know better than them, typically does not work out well in the long-term. Someday, GOG, you will fly too close to the sun, and nobody will care to catch you when your paper wings burn.
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ReynardFox: You know damn well that is a lie. All cosmetics in a game full of customization are part of the experience, trying to argue otherways is disingenuous.

And it's still DRM'd content in a single player game regardless. The principle still stands, this content should not exist as it does if GOG actually wants people to believe it is committed to DRM free.
Sometimes I wonder: given the meh nature of the items in question, maybe GOG locking this cosmetic content for galaxy users only should be seen as a positive? ;D

That aside, I don't mind if such content is offered to galaxy users for a short period(maybe a few months or so) as long as everyone who pays for the game in question eventually gets it.
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igrok: Sadly, you deserve no sympathy from me after your dick move to all Russian customers who came here for DRM-free gaming.
Now I wonder: if China lends Russia aid, will GOG block their "many gamers" from buying here as well(my guess is prolly not)?
Post edited March 19, 2022 by GamezRanker
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GOG.com: 1. The single-player mode has to be accessible offline.
Wow, this is the weakest definition of DRM-Free I have ever heard. It allows publishers to continue to provide a tiny portion of the full game as the single-player experience while loading up the actual game with DRM.

Why does the LAN experience need to contain DRM and how exactly is a game with DRM multiplayer a "DRM-Free" game?
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GOG.com: 2. Games you bought and downloaded can never be taken from you or altered against your will.
But you can't play the multiplayer aspects anymore?
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GOG.com: 3. The GOG GALAXY client is and will remain optional for accessing single-player offline mode.
Good but you already promised this. The problem with Galaxy is that it has already became the go to method of adding DRM to the multiplayer experience.
Post edited March 19, 2022 by torham
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With this, I do hope Hitman comes back. I'm glad I had the foresight to buy before it got pulled, but I feel that as long as I can still play the single player mode offline, then it is drm-free. All the other stuff people complained about isn't keeping me from accessing and playing the game and if I want to use those online features, then at least I have the option to - they're just extra like online multiplayer in other games. FEAR having online multiplayer stripped from the game doesn't mean it isn't DRM-Free. We can still play it. That's how I saw Hitman and considering how video games today are implementing similar things to what Hitman, it's really hard to tiptoe around it and unfair to tie GoG's hands on what they can and can't release on this store front. I'm not a schill and I am well aware that GoG is no friend to me as they are just a business. I've just been thinking about the whole controversy and realized they did try what they could with Hitman by at least getting us the single player component offline for us. To be fair though, I do get why everyone was upset as I was one of them. But after thinking about it and where video games are now, I can't imagine how else it could've been done and this update seems to show that GoG has realized this and at least they are being open about it, as they were with that release from the beginning and I appreciate that kind of transparency. At least the whole games isn't locked behind DRM.
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Can we get a commitment for better offline, Galaxy-less installers?