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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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vv221: I can, I did, and I am doing it again: GOG, you managed to alienate your DRM-free core customers again, this for sure is an achievement worth mentioning!

But since you asked for it I am going one step further: people pretending that there has been no issue with DRM creep on GOG lately are either misguided, or not caring about DRM as much as they pretend to.
So now you are calling me a pretender and presume to speak for all of us who care deeply about DRM-Free.

Really, that says everything we need to know about you and your sense of things and entitlement.

Is GOG perfect, no, not by a good amount. But they are still 99.99999999% DRM-Free when it comes to single-player, and for multiplayer, many of us core customers don't particularly care about that anyway. So any creep you think is going on, is quite minuscule and very slow, such that we can really question whether it is actual creep at all, and maybe just something in a few minds.

There is logic and reason and people who know how to use it, and then there are those who don't. But hey, don't let the facts get in the way of a good conspiracy and your vendetta against GOG. You a core customer ... my arse.
Post edited January 01, 2023 by Timboli
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eddee: What is most annoying to me is the number of games that do require Galaxy, despite GOG's protestations.
The games do not require Galaxy. The multiplayer feature might, but that's a very different issue. As you said yourself, that's how they were designed, nothing to do with GOG.
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eric5h5: nothing to do with GOG.
Cyberpunk & the Witcher 3, really?
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eric5h5: nothing to do with GOG.
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ValamirCleaver: Cyberpunk & the Witcher 3, really?
CD project and gog is not the same companies
A subsidiary, subsidiary company or daughter company is a company owned or controlled by another company, which is called the parent company or holding company. Two or more subsidiaries that either belong to the same parent company or having a same management being substantially controlled by same entity/group are called sister companies.

The subsidiary can be a company (usually with limited liability) and may be a government- or state-owned enterprise


Subsidiaries are separate, distinct legal entities for the purposes of taxation, regulation and liability. For this reason, they differ from divisions, which are businesses fully integrated within the main company, and not legally or otherwise distinct from it . In other words, a subsidiary can sue and be sued separately from its parent and its obligations will not normally be the obligations of its parent. However, creditors of an insolvent subsidiary may be able to obtain a judgment against the parent if they can pierce the corporate veil and prove that the parent and subsidiary are mere alter egos of one another. Thus any copyrights, trademarks, and patents remain with the subsidiary until the parent shuts down the subsidiary.

so technically he is correct
if yore asking if cd projectt coud have included no galaxy for gog since they own or control gog then yes unless gog or cd project had been sold off or simmilar fates
Post edited January 01, 2023 by Lodium
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paladin181: Yes. GOG punishing Russian citizens for the actions of their government was a real message to help stop the war... >.>
Yeah I don't think 2022 was GOG's best time. Putting aside all this they have failed to provide simple service requirements another outlet like Steam has.
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Timboli: and for multiplayer, many of us core customers don't particularly care about that anyway.
I recommend you take your own advice and speak for yourself.
Myself and a great many others DO care about that and wish that equivocators like yourself would stop pretend that it isn't a problem.

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Timboli: You a core customer ... my arse.
Oh, how hypocritical of you. I shall again throw your words right back at you.
Retroactively adding DRM to an existing 7 year old CDPR game has got to rate as the single biggest disaster
Apparently, I have no clue what's really going on on GoG.,,,

I assume you are referring to Witcher 3, correct?
What kind of DRM has been added?
(Still hope it's not true.)
high rated
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GOG.com: games you bought and downloaded can never be taken from you or altered against your will
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EnforcerSunWoo: I definitely would like to have a receipt on that. That statement is all well and good, but that is strictly not true. Would like to hear what is going on with Saints Row IV Re-Elected as far as retaining the original Game of the Century release as a downloadable option outside of rolling it back on Galaxy. Seems like we get "enhanced" or "remastered" versions that do not retain the same functionality as the original releases. As well as there being a few times where these versions have been fundamentally broken one way or another without being fixed properly. If you're going to stay true to that statement, then access to the original releases is a must and Saints Row IV - Game of the Century Edition would be a good start with that.
I'd like that.
Just tried installing the 'enhanced' SR IV version to see if the game runs terrible on my system as it apparently does on some other users systems. Thankfully it runs without issues, but having a Epic Online Services installation pop up the first time I start the game up soured my mood for sure. Not to mention that after removing the game I still have a directory with a eos_setup.lock file in it. Just great.

Edit: Oh, and gog, please don't change the purchase information of my orders, thankfully I backed some receipts up, the one of Saints Row IV was among them.
On April 20 of 2017 I got Saints Row: Gat out of Hell and Saints Row IV: Game of the Century Edition . Not, and I repeat not Saints Row IV: Re-Elected. Yet in my receipts you changed the title. WTF?
Post edited January 01, 2023 by NuffCatnip
Support Linux. Support the Steam Deck.
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reeneepso: Support Linux. Support the Steam Deck.
QFT
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Animaitor: (achievements should be forced on games that offer them on Steam).
No, a huge no. this would give another reason for dev/pub to not put their games on GOG, they may feel it is not worth the money to go through the work to add achievements. And if I miss out on games through GOG over something as dumb as achievements, I would not be happy. Not everyone cares about achievements.
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MrWichtig: Apparently, I have no clue what's really going on on GoG.,,,

I assume you are referring to Witcher 3, correct?
What kind of DRM has been added?
(Still hope it's not true.)
Similar to the Cyberpunk 2077 rewards (cosmetic items) they added also rewards to the next gen update of Witcher 3. To get six cosmetic items you have to use Galaxy to activate them in your game.

More information here:
https://www.thewitcher.com/en/my-rewards
Post edited January 01, 2023 by foad01
Any plans to update GOG Galaxy more frequently? It really needs more polish and optimization. It´s the slowest game launcher of them all. Yes, even the Epic client is snappier. I´m disappointed that progress has been so slow.
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MrWichtig: Apparently, I have no clue what's really going on on GoG.,,,

I assume you are referring to Witcher 3, correct?
What kind of DRM has been added?
(Still hope it's not true.)
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foad01: Similar to the Cyberpunk 2077 rewards (cosmetic items) they added also rewards to the next gen update of Witcher 3. To get six cosmetic items you have to use Galaxy to activate them in your game.

More information here:
https://www.thewitcher.com/en/my-rewards
Game content is locked behind Galaxy, which serves here like a DRM activation gate for the game content, such that the game content is not fully available to non-client users. Thus, Cyberpunk and the updated Witcher 3 should be considered "not fully DRM-free."

Enough of trying to brush it off as "cosmetic" when "cosmetic" is irrelevant to the point at hand.
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anidais: Any plans to update GOG Galaxy more frequently? It really needs more polish and optimization. It´s the slowest game launcher of them all. Yes, even the Epic client is snappier. I´m disappointed that progress has been so slow.
What it really needs is to go the way of the dodo. It has ruined the experience of this store for me and many others. Seems as though they're too busy locking game content behind it to update it, so you'll probably be waiting a while.
Post edited January 01, 2023 by rjbuffchix
@foad01 & rjbuffchix

Thanks a lot for the clarification!
I really should check out the forums more often...