The problem is that I don't really feel that GOG is doing anything that makes it truly stand out at the moment.
Linux is all well and good, but it's support has been spotty. That being said, the games that GOG have released for Linux to date seem to all work fairly well.
I couldn't give two shits about the movies. It was clear that GOG wasn't going to get anything of decent quality on board, and the releases smack of desperation.
The website redesign - I thought I'd get used to it, but unfortunately I just find the new navigation too clunky and too abstract. It's alright if I'm looking for a specific game, but browsing is a nightmare.
The indie releases haven't really been that interesting to me. I'll always prefer DRM-free to DRM'd games (to the extent that a game really has to be really fucking special for me to buy it as a Steam-only version, and even then only very cheap), but if I can get a DRM-free version + Steam key for the same price as a DRM-free version, then it stands to reason that I'll get that. I don't hate Steam for Steam's sake - I dislike it because it is abused to eliminate the option of choice.
And the indie titles that GOG releases offer have almost universally been made available on Humble in this form. I recently picked up Raiden 3 and Crimzon Clover here, but outside of these, the last indie I picked up was Doomdark's Revenge back in July (full disclosure: I don't buy that many PC games anymore anyway, but I'm still open to a compelling proposition - unfortunately, like Walter Donovan and his famous PC, I'm "still waiting").
Getting Disney and WBIE has the potential to become a real coup, although I'm somewhat concerned that, like Activision, EA and Ubisoft, this is going to pan out into nothing of any real note. All of the games that have been released here to date can already be bought on disc without online DRM (almost all of them at reasonable prices secondhand, and many of them even new), and I'm still waiting for a firm commitment to DRM-free with the release of previous DRM exclusives like the later Assassin's Creed titles, the Mass Effect trilogy, the Dragon Age trilogy, the Crysis trilogy. In fact, I don't think Activision or Ubisoft have released anything here in over a year(?).
Looking forward to Galaxy though, and I hope that GOG utilises its full potential. I'm not a multiplayer gamer, but it would still be nice to see some kind of DOSBox-game matchmaking in there, especially given the large number of DOSBOX-based games in here. I'm also curious to see what this Steam integration will entail, whether there will be some kind of actual connectivity with personal Steam accounts, or whether this simply means that GOG has made it easier for developers to port directly from the Steam API to the Galaxy API (which is looking increasingly likely).
Post edited February 13, 2015 by jamyskis