227: [url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110414150425/http://www.gog.com:80/en/about/]https://web.archive.org/web/20110414150425/http://www.gog.com:80/en/about/[/url]
zeogold: THIS is what it looked like? Holy moly, even the way they talk is mad different.
I can understand some of the viewpoints of the old-timers who say the place isn't what it used to be a lot better now.
Exactly. Most of my early game purchases were games I already owned and one in particular - Space Rangers 2 - was a game I grabbed after having the boxed edition that had StarForce DRM on it, screwed one PC hard and I had to work hard to get rid of it.
It's this one right here:
3. You buy it, you keep it.
Don't let your DRMs turn into nightmares (clever, no?). You won't find any intrusive copy protection in our games; we hate draconian DRM schemes just as much as you do, so at GOG.com you don't just buy the game, you actually own it. Once you download a game, you can install it on any PC and re-download it whenever you want, as many times as you need,
and you can play it without an internet connection. Of course Gremlins Inc. has shown this is completely false now.
The anger is not having a client, it is changing client from Optional to Mandatory and the bait and switch of DRM-Free to full-on-DR. But they pulled back a bit on the complete DRM, but that is just for now, within two years GOG will be complete full-DRM.