karnak1: The Silent Roads - A roguelike, post-apocalyptic videogame
(seems like a strange mix between
Neo-Scavenger and
Kings of Dragon Pass/
FTL ?).
Amaranthine -" rpg title filled with action, comedy, romance, horror"
(looks like a sort of JRPG)
Outland 17 - Steampunk XCOM
P1na: I'll wait for the usual comments about DRM, but steampunk XCOM sounds lovely. Amaranthine has the steam logo as a target, which coupled with it being an ARPG (which means either loot whoring diablo clone that I dislike or a tight combat experience I can hope a single indie dev to accomplish succesfully) makes me want to pass.
At first I only posted links to DRM-free-certified KS because I thought only those were relevant to the GOG crowd.
But, after some time, I became aware that many folks here also buy Steam (not my case) as well as DRM-free games.
At the same time, a game which gets funded and released on Steam can also be released on GOG later down the road. A game which doesn't get funded will never be played by anyone. So, in the long run, it's better for every interesting KS to find acceptance and funding.
And, with the release of the GOG Galaxy Client, it's very likely that more and more devs will be interested in releasing their games here. In fact, every time I contacted indie devs about the chance of releasing their games on GOG, they'd say that they'd feel reluctant because it was way easier to launch patches and updates through the Steam client (while GOG had no such thing). It may just be a lazy and lame excuse, but it's a known fact that most devs really are a bit lazy in such issues. :P
Anyway I'm one of those who believe Galaxy may bring some radical changes in GOG (maybe some good and some bad - but overall positive).