DoomSooth: Some games with offline installers didn't get patches when they should have had them. Don't count on them. Anyone else have PTSD from trying to keep up with Divinity: Original Sin II when it was first released? Hundreds of gigs of updates in a short amount of time but no patches. Bard's Tale IV: Director's Cut missed some patches, too.
john_hatcher: I had that problem with Divinity OS2 and that‘s when I decided to never buy a day 1 release on GOG. Simple as that for me.
So where do you buy your day 1 releases instead, and do they offer patches for offline installers (which I presume is the reason why you've decided not to buy GOG 1-day games, because sometimes there is no separate patch for the offline installers, but the whole installer is updated instead)?
Victih: Hey,
If I would download Cyberpunk 2077 with the offline backup downloader how can I update the game? Do I have to install the full (+- )70 GB everytime I want to update the game or is there a smaller update file?
Thanks in advance!
I think the earlier CDPR game, The Witcher 3, got separate patches, so I assume that will happen also with Cyberpunk 2077. But I guess they could also decide the opposite this time, not sure.
In fact, it seems that with both the original TW3 and TW3 Game of the Year Edition, you actually have to use the separate patch to update them to version 1.32, as the base installers are still 1.31 and not updated.
Anyway, if you want to play the game on release and want to keep it up to date all the time, common sense says you would use Galaxy as it auto-updates the game for you and probably also gets the latest updates faster than the offline installers.
I am fine using only offline installers as I tend to play games later, when they have already received all important updates and probably additional DLCs as well. I like the complete and polished experience, over the "have to play it day-one like all the cool kids at school". But to each his own of course.