rjbuffchix: And I just got a new update flag for Divinity: Original Sin 2 after downloading it twice the last few days. I'm not trying to be rude but is there a specific reason why these updates have to be built into a 44GB installer instead of individual links? Maybe I will re-re-redownload again hoping the third time is the charm.
I presume it is because updating only the installer is much easier and straightforward for the developer and/or GOG staff.
I'm interested to know why there is difference between different publishers though, ie. some games do get separate patches, while with some (like apparently D:OS2) do not. Is this up to how the publisher or GOG or both? Does it depend on whether the developer uses the dev portal or not?
Since you are happily using the Steam client (ie. you are not against using gaming clients per se), I can't understand why you keep hitting your head on the wall and not just run D:OS2 through Galaxy with its smaller delta updates and auto-update, if you really feel you need to have every daily update that D:OS2 ever gets?
Mind you, I don't currently use Galaxy, not because I am against it, but because I haven't felt the need yet. In a case like D:OS2 which apparently gets frequent updates right now (even for the offline installers), I would choose one of these:
- Wait until the game becomes more stable, not needing critical fixes frequently. I prefer playing my games when they are stable and mostly fixed (and with extra content released) so that I don't feel like a game tester. This is why I never play in-dev games either.
- Update the game only if there are critical updates, not necessarily re-downloading and re-installing the game several times every week for minor fixes. So checking the changelog how important the update is to me.
- If there is some reason why I feel the game needs to be updated often and as quickly as possible whenever it receives an update, then yes I would use a client (like Galaxy) with auto-update. This is especially important with multiplayer games where all players should be using the same version of the game.
kbnrylaec: From past history and bugs GOG have made, I do not trust GOG can automate things.
Luckily they don't need your trust in order to do it.