Asefo: The drm free card is why a lots of us are here, but it is not enough to convince friends to come.
When i tried to talk them into embracing gog over the years, I always tried to take a global approach and talking about gog being a parent company with cd project, loving video games themselves and not wanting to screw their customers, a company with a certain philosophy.
Now the first online search they make is how steam said no to censorship and how gog decided to kneel in front of some fake news marketing companies that almost everybody came to despise over the years.
I know you probably just wanted to appease things, and I have no intention to stop buying things here, but you certainly did not made things easy to encourage people coming here instead of steam.
If that's how you view Valve's decision to not clear out the garbage from their store, that they're saying no to censorship, then I think you're eating their spin raw.
Valve made the decision to do sod all beacuse it was the easiest thing for them to do that would cost them the least money. Then they wrapped inaction up in nice language and a lot of people thought Valve had just done something for them, when in reality Valve did nothing.
There currently is an issue with everybody and their braindamaged cat putting whatever garbage they want onto Steam, where it ends up cluttering the heck out of the store. There's all kinds of junk, from games that are just shoddy craftmanship to games that are borderline scams to bot farmer food. There's so much junk released onto steam that if you just look at the new release list then you're not going to find anything worthwhile in the flood of sewage.
My two most played sci-fi 4x games over the last 3-4 years? Distant Worlds and Stars in Shadow. Two indie games with a combined developer count of 3. There was just one guy working on DW, two on SiS. Both are great games, though DW really, really suffered from a clunky as heck UI. Anyway, how did I find those games? Through the media. I would never have found out about them by just browsing on Steam, because there they just don't stand out in any imaginable way.
It would be fantastic, in my view, if Steam would kick out all the useless garbage devs and all their useless garbage products. That's not censorship, it's quality control. Just like it isn't censorship when a store declines to sell rotten produce. But under the guise of not caving to censorship, Valve promised to have zero quality control. Nothing is too bad. No slice of meat is too rotten, even if it has maggots crawling all over it. And that's what you're praising them for, isn't it?
By the way, if you want to drag your friends to GOG, ask them the hypothetical question: What happens to your entire game library if Steam closes? Then your games are just gone. All of them. Because they all rely on Steam to run and no Steam means they're broken. Heck, we might realistically see a subscription service happen if Steam ever fades, because entirely too many people have entirely too much money irrevocably tied up in that service. Pay two bucks a month or lose access to several thousand bucks. It's an excellent racket, isn't it?
That can't really happen on GOG, though. Because every single last GOG game works just fine without GOG. Every. Single. One. It's not simply about "DRM-free" as a principle, it's about owning versus leasing and about being sure that your purchases stay bought.
That aside, does it really matter, in the grand scheme of things, that GOG is trying rather hard to end up in the lesser shitstorm after missing an implicit GG troll from RWS? What else would anyone expect? Them seeking out a big shitstorm on principle, just to show who's boss, and business consequences be damned?