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The end of the year and the beginning of the new one, is a very special time that allows us to take a moment to look back, and sum up everything that has happened. Those reflections are crucial in gaining more knowledge, celebrating our successes, and growing in pursuit of providing you with the very best experience while using both GOG and GOG GALAXY.

Having said that, 2022 was a year full of excitement, great new ideas, overcoming challenges, as well as finding and implementing new improvements and initiatives. And today, when we are looking back at this year, we are happy, proud and grateful. Happy, because we’ve managed to achieve goals that we’ve set for ourselves and for our community. Proud, because when facing challenges, we ended up better than we were before. And grateful, for you – our community and fellow gaming enthusiasts, because, simply, you’re the best.

Now, allow us to take you on a walk through 2022’s highlights, and see what we’ve managed to achieve together this year. But don’t worry, we’ll try to keep it short and sweet!

At the beginning of 2022, we focused on providing better platform experience for our community. We wanted to make sure that buying the game of your choosing, browsing the catalog, checking the best deals and new releases, finding hidden gems, or discovering what next to play would be as smooth and pleasant as possible. That desire manifested in releasing the new and improved catalog with more customized searches, and ability to sort and filter games by price, release date range, genres, and tags. We also made the main view in GOG GALAXY more dynamic and alive by highlighting all the events, giveaways, deals, and all the gaming goodness that took place.



Moreover, we increased our activities around classic games as a tribute to our roots. That means more classic releases, interviews with their creators, celebrating their anniversaries, adding the “Good Old Game” catalog, and more! Or, and that’s all thanks to you, gathering more than $4,000 USD for The Video Game History Foundation, which supports, preserves, celebrates, and teaches the history of video games.

Later in 2022, we raised a very important, both to you and us, topic of DRM-free gaming, our commitment to it and what it means to us. Everything we said back then still holds true and will continue to do so: the single-player mode has to be accessible offline, games you bought and downloaded can never be taken from you or altered against your will, the GOG GALAXY client is and will remain optional for accessing single-player offline mode.

Somewhere in the middle of the year, we also launched our blog! Creation of such a hub allowed us to post our editorials in a place, where its various engaging contents, filled with highlights of classic and new games, interviews, guest articles, gaming reflections and gaming’s universes deep dives, will be easy to find and always accessible through a few clicks. New editorial pieces will still appear there with even higher quality and interesting topics.



And when Halloween was just around the corner, we tackled another important topic of online-only games on GOG. We understand that some titles are meant to be played with others, and their multiplayer-only modes is also one of many beautiful gaming characteristics. Because we love games as much as you do, we wanted you to be able to scratch that multiplayer itch on GOG as well. And while we assure you that this will not influence our DRM-free approach discussed earlier, we opened our platform for online-only multiplayer games, which are marked as such on the gamecard, and we leave the decision up to you whether you want to play them.

Finally, to end the year on a high note, we’ve added new awesome feature to further improve GOG and GOG GALAXY experiences – OpenCritic implementation to our gamecards. By partnering up with one of the most renowned and respected review aggregation websites for video games, we want you to not only grasp a better understanding of games that you are interested in, but also help you make better decisions when making purchases and expand your library with titles that suit your gaming needs best.



We wholeheartedly believe that all that we’ve managed to achieve in 2022 are great steps towards becoming the favorite platform for everyone that loves, and still keeps falling in love with games. We absolutely can’t wait for all the incredibly exciting things that 2023 will bring, and we believe that for you, and with you, we are able to achieve every goal we’ll set for ourselves. Hope you all had a wonderful year, and the next one will be even better – see you in 2023!
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Besides, what the group of inquisition user are saying on these forums. I felt GOG really step their game up this year. Game's I never thought would come to GOG showed up DRM free. My money was happily spent with no regrets.

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dyscode: My only wish for the future of GOG is that it will be a 100% DRM-Free store and not a 'somewhat DRM-Free' store.

If I accept DRMed content, I definitely get it from Steam and not GOG!

Being able to edit reviews would be nice, too.

Good luck, GOG!
This!
Post edited December 31, 2022 by Syphon72
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alexandros050: Happy new year GOG. Here are some thing that you could improve in 2023.

1) Let us edit and delete reviews.
2) Fix the purple dot and probably install a new forum software such as (Vbulletin or IPB)
3) No Galaxy locked rewards (Withcer 3 and CP2077) (No reason to do that when you released Skyrim without locked content)
4) Contact devs about missing updates
5) Be more active with the community like you did in the past.
You hit the nail on the head for imporiving GOG more.
Post edited December 31, 2022 by Syphon72
I would have to say most of this what we have achieved declaration is to convince themselves at this point. While some good games have indeed been released here, the website has gone to absolute hell and hasn't come back yet. You don't know when updates are available, no one's games are displaying on their profiles, when a game goes on sell as a new release many times it is mistakenly sold for full price to the first buyers, games were being yanked from accounts forcing you to claim them again, forum notifications broken. draconian forum policies, violating their own policies by engaging politics and alienating a nation of people, banning long time users, rude and slow customer support, changing the definition of terms, etc.

Those issues above are merely the website. I don't use Galaxy, so I probably saved myself a paragraph there. Then, to reiterate...the customer support is not absymal...it just doesn't exist. So, it is really infuriating, insulting to the intelligence, and a bit absurd that people want to make excuses for them all the time. They are not small time at this point, nor are they indie. I feel as though GOG has become the mentally challenged kid that everyone pats on the back and says good job...even when it isn't.....or the new Walmart of the games world making you do self-checkout and customer service by your lonesome. They want the cred and the rep of the big boys in the industry, but they lack the know-how and wherewithal it seems. Then again...when one only has something like 4 staff members, what does one expect? I'll leave CDPR criticism alone...even though it goes hand in hand with all this.

I'll buy what suits me here because it can be very very cost effective. I mean...I shop in stores where I cannot stand them or the staff too simply because I'm getting a benefit for my wallet. But anyway, the way things are going...GoG is turning into GAG.
Post edited December 31, 2022 by DemonKiller49
Peaceful new year GOG staff!! Thanks for awesome 2022!
All in all it was a good year and you have taken many steps in the right direction. There are still issues and the only thing you should really work on is communicating with us. That said, thanks for all the freebies, thank you for the great support.

Let's hope for a great 2023 with more Indie gems and maybe some AAA games as well. I wish you and your loved ones as well as the community all the best, may you enjoy a happy and healthy new year. :-)
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I think this year was better than the last one from drm-free/client free point of view:
- Skyrim release without anything locked behind galaxy and a connection was a huge step forward (the fact that there is no in game menu about CC is awesome!).

On the other end the update to The Witcher 3 a few weeks ago with a free dlc locked behind gog galaxy (while not crucial to anything in the story) I think was a step back.

Still nothing like the last year release of Hitman were the drm was really there.

I wish a 2023 where gog does not push gog galaxy and/or drm in any way
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DemonKiller49: I would have to say most of this what we have achieved declaration is to convince themselves at this point. While some good games have indeed been released here, the website has gone to absolute hell and hasn't come back yet. You don't know when updates are available, no one's games are displaying on their profiles, when a game goes on sell as a new release many times it is mistakenly sold for full price to the first buyers, games were being yanked from accounts forcing you to claim them again, forum notifications broken. draconian forum policies, violating their own policies by engaging politics and alienating a nation of people, banning long time users, rude and slow customer support, changing the definition of terms, etc.

Those issues above are merely the website. I don't use Galaxy, so I probably saved myself a paragraph there. Then, to reiterate...the customer support is not absymal...it just doesn't exist. So, it is really infuriating, insulting to the intelligence, and a bit absurd that people want to make excuses for them all the time. They are not small time at this point, nor are they indie. I feel as though GOG has become the mentally challenged kid that everyone pats on the back and says good job...even when it isn't.....or the new Walmart of the games world making you do self-checkout and customer service by your lonesome. They want the cred and the rep of the big boys in the industry, but they lack the know-how and wherewithal it seems. Then again...when one only has something like 4 staff members, what does one expect? I'll leave CDPR criticism alone...even though it goes hand in hand with all this.

I'll buy what suits me here because it can be very very cost effective. I mean...I shop in stores where I cannot stand them or the staff too simply because I'm getting a benefit for my wallet. But anyway, the way things are going...GoG is turning into GAG.
Sounds like you're profile is just a screwed up I never had issue you listed. Besides blue check marks disappearing, but there back. I do agree GOG website was unstable this year and needs improvement.

I'm guessing this your alt account.
Post edited December 31, 2022 by Syphon72
Well, pat yourself on the backs there, of course. What else can you say?

Meanwhile for me 2022 on GOG was a huge disappointment for me.

This year my relationship with GOG has been shaken for the first time since I opened the account in 2011. Creeping DRM practices, like Witcher III, adding DRM-ed games, the fact that somewhere over the last ten years policy changed from "it's DRM-free, it's yours, it's all right to share it" to "you may not share the files" - it has been a blow. The fact that things happen with my catalogue behind my back - that is something I aboslutely hated other services for and this year I learned this is happening on GOG as well. F**k, I just discovered the Spear of Destiny thing in this very thread. I have a back up of it on my hard drive, but it turns out it's not an insurance against GOG going down, it's an insurance against their own practices!

I actually feel betrayed by the service I have been using for more than a decade and on which I have literally hundreds of games. Time to back up all the remaining ones.
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vv221: You managed to alienate your DRM-free core customers again, this for sure is an achievement worth mentioning!
Gawd, you can't say that.

You can only realistically claim that on behalf of yourself, not all DRM-Free core customers, as I certainly don't feel alienated.
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How about a GOG posted thread about them making some New Years Resolutions on what they can and will improve upon in 2023? Would be nice to see, but I have my doubts that the thread ever gets made.
Post edited December 31, 2022 by EnforcerSunWoo
Thanks for bringing more Microids games and Skyrim, was a wonderful surprise.
All best wishes for next year.
Post edited December 31, 2022 by Moonbeam
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Timboli: .
It's certainly a common sentiment. We wouldn't have so much debate on these forums if it wasn't the case.
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DemonKiller49: A whole lot of great points.
Yes. GOG -- the site (not just the forums, but everything) is falling apart. The catalog is unmanageable, features are breaking and broken for years, with new ones breaking regularly. At this point, while I admire and agree with the requests for, e.g., finding and editing your existing reviews (it's necessary), they need to focus on fixing what's already there first before even thinking about more new features.
At least they finally managed to stop the downvote abuse. Catalog got tags, the option to hide dlcs and owned titles.. it's definitely better than before. It's not all bad.
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EnforcerSunWoo: How about a GOG posted thread about them making some New Years Resolutions on what they can and will improve upon in 2023? Would be nice to see, but I have my doubts that the thread ever gets made.
They might make a thread like that, but it would be one that is filtered through committees first and given a PR-speak veneer before they say anything, just like the OP of the post has been, and just like all of GOG's announcement posts always are.

So under those conditions, such a thread would have no actual value.

What GOG probably wouldn't do, though, is the thing that actually would have value; that would be for GOG to have someone speak for their company in a forthcoming and forthright and transparent manner, a spokesperson who agrees that they will directly address all of the questions - even the difficult & uncomfortable hardball questions - & issues that the GOG community has for them in relation to GOG.

And the questions & issues would need to be answered & addressed as fully and openly as possible, in the manner of normal everyday speaking, as opposed to any PR-like, committee-approved manner of speaking.

GOG definitely should do that, even though I don't think they will.
Post edited December 31, 2022 by Ancient-Red-Dragon