Posted May 05, 2016

And whilst the bundling 'explanation' makes sense in general, you could equally apply the "it doesn't make sense for GOG to sell a game that's under $1 / £1 / €1 elsewhere" to an awful lot of stuff they do sell that fits exactly the same description. Eg, the cost of custom packaging and play-testing for $0 "Abandonware" freebies (Beneath A Steel Sky, FOTAQ, TeenAgent, etc). Or 99p Steam sale Thief Gold, Deus Ex, etc / 69p Steam sale Costume Quest, Syberia 1-2, System Shock 2, etc / 58p Steam sale Commandos Enemy Lines + expansion, etc.
^ And none of those are even bundles. Include those and "why bother" selling Outlast, Steamworld Dig, Hammerwatch, Retro City Rampage, Never Alone, Hotline Miami, QUBE, Sir You Are Being Hunted, Goodbye Deponia, The Bard's Tale, Broken Sword Directors Cut, Pixel Piracy, Torchlight, To The Moon, Psychonauts, Amnesia Dark Descent, Mark Of The Ninja, Brutal Legend, Race The Sun, Dust An Elysian Tale, Fez, Bastion, FTL, VVVVVV, Beatbuddy, Samorost 2, Machinarium, World of Goo, Legend of Grimrock, The Swapper, etc, which have all been "bundled" for under $1 (and as little as $0.32 each using your "bundle maths"), yet are still priced on GOG at typically £4-7.
Do we remove all these titles for the sake of consistency, or admit that rejection policy on the grounds of "but it's already less than $1 / €1 / £1 elsewhere" really isn't that consistent?... And the answer why GOG still sell them is the same - a lot of us are quite happy to pay a premium to own DRM-free games (vs merely acquiring an "open ended rental license" (Steam keys in a nutshell)). If GOG acquired Betrayer for say £3.99 (Steam listed price), would I pay say £2-£2.67 in a 33-50% off sale despite it being previously listed for £1 (or "$0.25" using your maths) in a Humble Bundle? Yes I would. And that's no different to dozens of other games GOG sells which are also generally cheaper elsewhere. Eg, "where's the sales potential" in selling Morrowind for £14.99, whilst £9.50 gets you Morrowind and Oblivion and Skyrim combined in a sale elsewhere (or where the retail GOTY can be picked up for less than £5 on EBay))...
The problem for many isn't really holding up any single game as examples of this or that. It's a severe lack of consistency plus the excuses that try to "explain" why some decent games get rejected for purely arbitrary reasons don't really seem to add up, either on sub $1 price sales competition or the old "rejected games must all be shovelware whilst everything GOG sells is all bug-free Golden Oldies" wishful thinking fallacy.
Post edited May 05, 2016 by AB2012