Posted December 19, 2020
Ancient-Red-Dragon: Besides, in any case, so what if GOG did receive messages from "many gamers" telling them not to release the game? Since when do customers get to dictate to GOG what they shall or shall not release? Answer: never...until now (and even now, that's only because GOG made up a fake story to pretend they suddenly started banning games due to customer feedback, as a cover for the real truth that they bent the knee and censored the game solely in order not potentially to offend the Chinese government).
Gersen: I would say since those customers represent the biggest and fastest growing PC game market in the world, and that Gog is available there, without VPN, unofficially. I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of those games, if they exists, were actually not bot or even nationalist, but simply Chinese game afraid that Gog could be blocked if they release this game. Don't get me wrong I still think the way they handled the whole Devotion debacle to be incredibly bad, but from a cynical business point of view I can understand why they don't want to draw the CCP attention on themselves.
Ancient-Red-Dragon: Oh, they lied alright!
They probably received very few, if any messages.
And if they did receive message, then they were from bot accounts controlled by agents of the Chinese government, and definitely not from "gamers," as GOG flagrantly lies about.
And in any case, why is GOG hiding the supposed messages?
GOG should publicly disclose all the alleged messages that they got so that we, the real customers, can audit & vet & scrutinize them. GOG can simply redact the 'personal' information that may be in them (even though they are from bots/fictional characters, not people, so therefore, there can be no actual personal information in them anyway), and put the rest of the content up on the internet unedited.
Besides, in any case, so what if GOG did receive messages from "many gamers" telling them not to release the game? Since when do customers get to dictate to GOG what they shall or shall not release? Answer: never...until now (and even now, that's only because GOG made up a fake story to pretend they suddenly started banning games due to customer feedback, as a cover story for the real truth --- which is that they bent the knee at the last minute, and censored the game solely out of fear that they do not potentially offend the Chinese government).
W3irdN3rd: If the messages from "many gamers" do exist, they're not on social media. (not Western social media anyway..) I doubt "many gamers" would contact CDPR privately. They probably received very few, if any messages.
And if they did receive message, then they were from bot accounts controlled by agents of the Chinese government, and definitely not from "gamers," as GOG flagrantly lies about.
And in any case, why is GOG hiding the supposed messages?
GOG should publicly disclose all the alleged messages that they got so that we, the real customers, can audit & vet & scrutinize them. GOG can simply redact the 'personal' information that may be in them (even though they are from bots/fictional characters, not people, so therefore, there can be no actual personal information in them anyway), and put the rest of the content up on the internet unedited.
Besides, in any case, so what if GOG did receive messages from "many gamers" telling them not to release the game? Since when do customers get to dictate to GOG what they shall or shall not release? Answer: never...until now (and even now, that's only because GOG made up a fake story to pretend they suddenly started banning games due to customer feedback, as a cover story for the real truth --- which is that they bent the knee at the last minute, and censored the game solely out of fear that they do not potentially offend the Chinese government).
My best guess is that if these messages exist, they would exist as reviews for CDPR games, as review bombing is the only way they know to communicate. So I tried to look at https://steamcommunity.com/app/1091500/negativereviews/?browsefilter=mostrecent&snr=1_5_100010_&p=1&filterLanguage=schinese (and equivalent pages for Witcher 3 and GWENT) but on this page I can't select a date range. And with infinite scroll it will take forever (and probably crash my computer?) to get to the December 16 reviews, the date they supposedly received these messages. Though even if I did, I expect any threats addressed to CDPR or Red Candle Games to have been deleted by now.
If someone else has a way of collecting all reviews (including positive as threats may have been disguised as positive reviews) from December 16 for CDPR games, please share.
Post edited December 19, 2020 by kohlrak