mrkgnao: Guessing which games are DRM-free on GOG is also a workaround, maintained by the community. The day GOG openly and clearly indicates which of their games are fully DRM-free and which are not, I will consider it a viable alternative.
I don't think steam is a better alternative than GOG, except price wise, which is why I don't buy there either. I was replying to the goglodyte who seemed to suggest that GOG is.
Well, not that I approve of the practice of locking content away, but with GOG at least, I get something that runs DRM-free with pretty much everything except Gwent which is free.
It might not always be 100% of the content, but honestly, the drm-free version getting treated as a second-class citizen predates Galaxy. I recall that even before Galaxy, there was a lot of content that was Steam-only locked into Steam's client/libraries and I'm sure this is precisely why they have Galaxy now.
But is GOG slipping in its drm-free values? Sure. Were they ever into drm-free as a principle rather than a business decision to cater to a niche? I've been skeptical about that from the beginning honestly (I've seen enough to know that genuinely principled private corporations are an extreme rarity, its mostly about business).
However, there is something to be said about their initial business model have been solely based on being drm-free and them still openly, although grudgingly now I feel, providing support for that.
The day they won't anymore, well, I'll have my collection backed up and ready to play. I have enough to last me a lifetime and peer pressure (with regard to newer games) doesn't affect me much.