Posted December 18, 2020
low rated
I am profoundly sad that people are blaming GOG. I'd expect better understanding of how the world works from adults - alas, it seems YA literature causes permanent brain damage. I've seen absurd posts suggesting it would've sufficed for GOG to restrict the game in China, as if it's the matter of the law.
Having been removed from Steam almost two years ago, Devotion is currently not for sale anywhere. It was briefly - for one week - available in Taiwan as a limited physical edition.
Why?
There are many companies which don't do business in China, don't have deals with Epic and such, and have no market share to lose - why hasn't the game found a distributor in any of those in almost two years?
Why can't they sell it from their own website, worldwide except China?
Why didn't some freeze peaches techbro set up a store for them and capitalized on the good publicity?
The reason is that, to sell it, they actually need to get paid.
The messages from "concerned gamers" weren't coming from Winnie or Epic, they were coming from Visa and Mastercard. What GOG would've had to give up for trying to sell Devotion isn't the Chinese market or the Epic deal, it's the existence of the site itself.
And Red Candle still wouldn't have gotten the money.
The sad fact is there's no domestic right to banking services even in countries which pride themselves on being bastions of freedom, not to mention internationally. There's no law, for example, that American banks need to offer banking services to all law-abiding Americans. They kick you off and you're unpersoned, unable to participate in the economy, worse than a felon.
Censorship works because people can't start their own businesses to cover gaps in the market, because they can't get paid. This is where the buck stops. This is who you have to fight, not some Polish nerds in a badly heated office.
Thank you and have a good day.
Having been removed from Steam almost two years ago, Devotion is currently not for sale anywhere. It was briefly - for one week - available in Taiwan as a limited physical edition.
Why?
There are many companies which don't do business in China, don't have deals with Epic and such, and have no market share to lose - why hasn't the game found a distributor in any of those in almost two years?
Why can't they sell it from their own website, worldwide except China?
Why didn't some freeze peaches techbro set up a store for them and capitalized on the good publicity?
The reason is that, to sell it, they actually need to get paid.
The messages from "concerned gamers" weren't coming from Winnie or Epic, they were coming from Visa and Mastercard. What GOG would've had to give up for trying to sell Devotion isn't the Chinese market or the Epic deal, it's the existence of the site itself.
And Red Candle still wouldn't have gotten the money.
The sad fact is there's no domestic right to banking services even in countries which pride themselves on being bastions of freedom, not to mention internationally. There's no law, for example, that American banks need to offer banking services to all law-abiding Americans. They kick you off and you're unpersoned, unable to participate in the economy, worse than a felon.
Censorship works because people can't start their own businesses to cover gaps in the market, because they can't get paid. This is where the buck stops. This is who you have to fight, not some Polish nerds in a badly heated office.
Thank you and have a good day.