Posted June 15, 2022
low rated
TheNamelessOne_PL: Do you *really* feel like you own your GOG games?
I love GOG and the concept of owning games. But do I really own them?
Things to consider:
1. I am dependant on GOG servers and my hard drives. As long as GOG is still up, I can redownload my games at any time. However, the store may close at one point or another. So the other source of ownership of those games are my hard drives. Here's the problem. I have over 200 games in my GOG library. It would take a considerable amount of hard drive space to back them all up. But then, I would need to back them up three, perhaps four times, in case one of my drives goes the way of the dodo.
2. Video games are just strings of 0's and 1's. Can you really, "own" those?
3. Will they still be playable on a computer from 2045? If a game becomes unplayable due to software changes, ot's effectively as if you didn't own it, at all.
Like, recently, I claimed the two giveaway games GOG gave us. Do I REALLY "own" those games? What do you think?
To clarify, by, "own a game", I mean owning a COPY of it, not of the game itself.
Do you feel like you *own* your GOG content? Why or why not?
Really even drm free. You will never really own your game. Same for music, film. Same book. Whether dematerialized or even physical. A cultural property does not belong to you unless you are the creator or the publisher. The buyer just has a user license (even for books).I love GOG and the concept of owning games. But do I really own them?
Things to consider:
1. I am dependant on GOG servers and my hard drives. As long as GOG is still up, I can redownload my games at any time. However, the store may close at one point or another. So the other source of ownership of those games are my hard drives. Here's the problem. I have over 200 games in my GOG library. It would take a considerable amount of hard drive space to back them all up. But then, I would need to back them up three, perhaps four times, in case one of my drives goes the way of the dodo.
2. Video games are just strings of 0's and 1's. Can you really, "own" those?
3. Will they still be playable on a computer from 2045? If a game becomes unplayable due to software changes, ot's effectively as if you didn't own it, at all.
Like, recently, I claimed the two giveaway games GOG gave us. Do I REALLY "own" those games? What do you think?
To clarify, by, "own a game", I mean owning a COPY of it, not of the game itself.
Do you feel like you *own* your GOG content? Why or why not?