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Postal 2: Komplete edition!
Bundled Items
- Manuals
Game Description
Video Credit: Mixerced

Ever had one of those days? The Postal Dude sure has...Two of them! The Postal Dude leaves for his first day of work at Running With Scissors and that's where the **** hits the fan for a second time! Forget everything you know about first person shooters, morality, and the real world...its time to go POSTAL AGAIN!

In Postal 2, the best way to handle life's problems is to confront them head on! Take on marching bands, protesters, policemen and civilians, with or without weapons. Postal 2 is sandbox slaughter and mindless mayhem at its finest!

This ZOOM Platform Exclusive Edition includes:

Postal 2 (2014) (Patch 1415 Build):
Postal 2: A Week In Paradise (Play Through The Whole Week In One Play-Through)
5 New NPC Voices -Dismemberment Feature From Postal 2: Eternal Damnation Now Active For Entire Game
All Weapons From Postal 2: Eternal Damnation Now Available For Entire Game
All New NPCs Including ZOMBIES!
Added Widescreen Support
FoV Slider and V-Sync Video Options
Added See-Through Windows
Added Pre-Launch Settings Editor

Postal 2 Fudge Pack Plus includes:
Postal 2: Share The Pain
Postal 2: A Week In Paradise
Postal 2: Apocalypse Weekend
Postal 2: Christmas
Postal 2: Eternal Damnation
Added Widescreen Support

Postal 2 (Gameplay) fudge pack!
Post edited December 23, 2020 by fr33kSh0w2012
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JAAHAS: Unfortunately pretty certain is not good enough for me anymore after spending years buying physical copies only after having become pretty certain that I should be able to download a NoCD fix for each of them, nowadays the only way I will agree to pay a single cent for a new copy is when a game is officially sold DRM-free.
(Content: YT clip with sound....has some light swearing)

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HunchBluntley: That's never an excuse for them to publicly behave like a thin-skinned asshat to both a competitor and its customers (who could potentially become your [that is, Zoom's] customers, if you don't alienate them).
If you had only these two options, which would you rather have:

A company(like zoom) that is a bit rude and crude sometimes, but mostly fair and communicative with it's customers....or one(like GOG is seemingly becoming over time) that puts on a (likely false) veil of niceness while not bothering to be communicative much with it's customers?
Post edited December 23, 2020 by GamezRanker
Is a small site, something tell me that some "gamers" will try to take it down, I do not want to be a bird of bad luck, just express a possibility, hopefully I will be wrong, and finally there will be a store where you can buy Devotion, I would also like that GOG could reach an agreement so that the game, as a last option, not be published in China. Meanwhile let's keep voting the game on the wishlist.
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HunchBluntley: That's never an excuse for them to publicly behave like a thin-skinned asshat to both a competitor and its customers (who could potentially become your [that is, Zoom's] customers, if you don't alienate them).
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GamezRanker: If you had only these two options, which would you rather have:

A company(like zoom) that is a bit rude and crude sometimes, but mostly fair and communicative with it's customers....or one(like GOG is seemingly becoming over time) that puts on a (likely false) veil of niceness while not bothering to be communicative much with it's customers?
That's a false dilemma. There's no "either-or" here. Their store is still small enough that they can afford to be open and communicative. But flying off the handle is not something that just comes with openness/communicativeness. There is pretty much never a good reason for an employee of a company, speaking as a representative of that company, to tell some random person, "Mind your own business" (or anything similarly rude). If you can't reign in your impulse to shoot from the hip, you shouldn't be speaking with the official voice of the company. If that was a hired PR rep, they should've been demoted (at least) over that gaffe. And if it was one of the executives...well, that doesn't exactly fill me with confidence in other aspects of their business operations.

Make no mistake, I have no love for being handed a cup of piss and being told it's lemonade (i.e., "Good News™"), but I believe that's usually a high-level problem -- an executive or board of directors making a shitty decision, then passing it to the PR staff to figure out how to sell it as a positive, or at least as "not too bad". That's not what the above incident was. Things like that are the result of someone with insufficient impulse control and/or no ability to evaluate how something will be perceived by others operating on emotion and "posting angry" (or, in this case, bitter) in a public venue, instead of waiting to calm down, then going through a proper channel. (The hell of it is, they could've even pulled off most of that exchange with no loss of face or bad feelings had they phrased certain things differently!) It was just needless dickishness.

Remember: tactlessness is not the same as honesty, nor is it an acceptable substitute.
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HunchBluntley: As mentioned in the Twitter exchange, it was Killing Time
Ah, sorry, was just writing for memory, got that wrong.

Otherwise, I for one very much prefer bluntness, and not "going through proper channels".
Post edited December 23, 2020 by Cavalary
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HunchBluntley: As mentioned in the Twitter exchange, it was Killing Time
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Cavalary: Ah, sorry, was just writing for memory, got that wrong.
No worries. The confusion probably came from TrickStyle being one of the games they were still selling (or maybe even added?) during the period between its removal from, and its return to, GOG (and presumably Steam, too), and some people questioning what exactly their vaguely-stated "special relationship" was, that they were still able to keep selling it and a few others.
Post edited December 23, 2020 by HunchBluntley
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HunchBluntley: Their store is still small enough that they can afford to be open and communicative. But flying off the handle is not something that just comes with openness/communicativeness. There is pretty much never a good reason for an employee of a company, speaking as a representative of that company, to tell some random person, "Mind your own business" (or anything similarly rude).
1. Someone saying mind your own business isn't being that rude, relatively speaking.
2. That's essentially what GOG tells us every day by staying silent on various issues.
(also fwiw, i'd rather have that sort of response than silence....which is what GOG gives us, for the most part)

Btw full disclosure: I didn't read the links in full yet....going to do so in a bit.
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kohlrak: Seems whomever owns some of those licenses didn't bother with verification or didn't think zoom was worth it. Or Codemasters withheld that information. Either way, if you were a license holder, the game with your content wouldn't be on Zoom, right now, would it?
It would depend on whether or not the license holders are even aware of this, but the idea that Codemasters would have withheld the information seems far less likely than them never having had a deal with Zoom in the first place or that they indeed are letting the remaining time the car licenses are still valid to run out without bringing GRID back to bigger stores.

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GamezRanker: What you just said reminds me of this scene from the film Tommy Boy

(Content: YT clip with sound....has some light swearing)
Does not follow, I have wasted enough of my time hunting for cracks for copies I legally own, so somewhere in this decade I eventually decided that I would no longer reward publishers for the extra effort they force me to do in order to future-proof my games. Nowadays I simply ignore such games entirely or in some very rare cases if I can obtain a used copy I might still do so even if a new copy in the bargain bin would be cheaper to get.
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kohlrak: Seems whomever owns some of those licenses didn't bother with verification or didn't think zoom was worth it. Or Codemasters withheld that information. Either way, if you were a license holder, the game with your content wouldn't be on Zoom, right now, would it?
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JAAHAS: It would depend on whether or not the license holders are even aware of this, but the idea that Codemasters would have withheld the information seems far less likely than them never having had a deal with Zoom in the first place or that they indeed are letting the remaining time the car licenses are still valid to run out without bringing GRID back to bigger stores.
Well, to find out whether or not a deal was present, we could analyze the game installers or something post-install. Does it have proper registry keys, etc? Do all the games work? My experience is that it can be a total pain in the ass to get things to work DRM-Free without breaking something. It wouldn't be proof, but it would sure give us more info.
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GamezRanker: What you just said reminds me of this scene from the film Tommy Boy

(Content: YT clip with sound....has some light swearing)
Does not follow, I have wasted enough of my time hunting for cracks for copies I legally own, so somewhere in this decade I eventually decided that I would no longer reward publishers for the extra effort they force me to do in order to future-proof my games. Nowadays I simply ignore such games entirely or in some very rare cases if I can obtain a used copy I might still do so even if a new copy in the bargain bin would be cheaper to get.
Same, for the most part (there's just certain types of things you can't get without caving). It's getting old. If only you knew what i knew, though: future proofing is slowly going to become alot more harder than anyone's bargained for. I foresee console games far, far easier to future proof due to emulators.
I bet the Zoom platform owners would be super happy to know that there are actually people talking about their store here. I also bet that they contribute such a small amount of sales that they are just a rounding error for most publishers so it's easy to see why they have forgotten their existence.

I also highly doubt that Devotion will get released on the Zoom Platform. If Red Candle wanted to release their games on other stores besides Steam, GOG and Epic they would definitely go with itch.io first. I don't think that itch.io is so dependent on Chinese investment yet that they have to worry about making China mad, but they also don't have Detention there either, so there's no precedent to release this game.

I think Zoom-platform is like fire flower games, just a side project, DRM-Free store that offers some games for sale, but is not a big priority and that's fine. I just bought KGB and Commander Blood from there. The publisher is Microids and the developer is Cryo so it's not like the devs are going to see a cent of my money either way. I'll just save the offline installer and if the store exists in the future and expands great, if not, I have copies that will likely still work on windows 15 since they run in DOSBox so no problem for me.

Also GOG please learn some lessons from all your recent (and past) bad press and do better. Stop calling us gamers, stop your edgy marketing,it's insulting and stop pretending like you are "one of the good guys and are fighting against DRM", you are not.
Post edited December 23, 2020 by llamas
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JAAHAS: Does not follow, I have wasted enough of my time hunting for cracks for copies I legally own, so somewhere in this decade I eventually decided that I would no longer reward publishers for the extra effort they force me to do in order to future-proof my games. Nowadays I simply ignore such games entirely or in some very rare cases if I can obtain a used copy I might still do so even if a new copy in the bargain bin would be cheaper to get.
Tbh I am a-ok with hunting for file needed to get legit bought games working(if needed), edit config files, etc...to me, a little challenge makes the fun to come all the more worth it(once the game starts and I can play it). :)

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kohlrak: I foresee console games far, far easier to future proof due to emulators.
What about stuff like the single-player story DLC for some games, which is "tied to the consoles"?
Post edited December 24, 2020 by GamezRanker
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JAAHAS: Does not follow, I have wasted enough of my time hunting for cracks for copies I legally own, so somewhere in this decade I eventually decided that I would no longer reward publishers for the extra effort they force me to do in order to future-proof my games. Nowadays I simply ignore such games entirely or in some very rare cases if I can obtain a used copy I might still do so even if a new copy in the bargain bin would be cheaper to get.
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GamezRanker: Tbh I am a-ok with hunting for file needed to get legit bought games working(if needed), edit config files, etc...to me, a little challenge makes the fun to come all the more worth it(once the game starts and I can play it). :)
I'm a little more worried about some upcomming issues that finding a file won't be enough. You'll need an OS or even an emulator to go with that OS. The future is looking ugly because of shit Google's doing behind the scenes that your average person neither knows about nor cares about.
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kohlrak: I foresee console games far, far easier to future proof due to emulators.
What about stuff like the single-player story DLC for some games, which is "tied to the consoles"?
Usually the DLC ends up among the R-rated content, but i'm mostly focused on the stuff pre-DLC-era. That could get interesting as time goes on.
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kohlrak: Usually the DLC ends up among the R-rated content, but i'm mostly focused on the stuff pre-DLC-era. That could get interesting as time goes on.
Some games have some nice story DLC, though, like the Mass Effect series. Imo it'd be a shame if it gets lost to time.
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kohlrak: Usually the DLC ends up among the R-rated content, but i'm mostly focused on the stuff pre-DLC-era. That could get interesting as time goes on.
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GamezRanker: Some games have some nice story DLC, though, like the Mass Effect series. Imo it'd be a shame if it gets lost to time.
There's alot of games already lost to time because of less. Unless they can be patched or the pirates do a good number on them, they'll be lost. That's one of the reasons i'm not worried as much about the DLC era stuff. Fortunately, the messages usually aren't as profound.

My game that i'm making, will be open source.
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Orkhepaj: ah another platform which will change when it reached a certain user number
Sadly yes. Money changes everything even though it isn't everything.