WinterSnowfall: It looks like we're fast heading for a world in which every major game publisher has their own digital distribution service and sell a large majority of their products only on it... If anyone's looking for me, I'll be playing my offline DRM-free games.
More and more games getting pulled from various stores is sad news indeed.
Pulling it from the store because they don't want to support it any longer is one thing. Shutting down servers necessary to unlock in-game content and DLC is a problem in itself. The really big issue is that without access to unlockable content you can't progress and that is the biggest issue of them all.
They, meaning UBI, can't even fix that mess by issuing a patch to unlock the content, DLC, achievements and what not. Reason being that they broke up with Limbic after the debacle with HoMM 7. Without them this is a broken game now which will never find its way to GOG - sad as it is, because this was one I had hoped for would be sold here DRM free.
M&M X being one of those cases where a game not only needs the Steam client but also an active Ubisoft account is also part of the problem. Had there been a native Steam version the game + DLC would still be intact and would have remained in a playable state.
A dire warning not to buy any games necessitating not only Steam but also EA or Ubisoft accounts on top of that. Concerns about ownership or accessibility in case the company that's sold you the game aside, there is in this case no way to backup all your files to at least be able to keep playing should this most unfortunate event occur.
That's maybe also a great case to point to people so eager to have achievements in games and clients to start games with that that's what's going to happen and they can do j*s*t about it when everything's gone and content no longer available. It's also why this idea to have GOG clients and achievements and shop integrations isn't a good idea. There is any number of games with achievements and need for the client to play them online. GOG decides to pull? Bye bye everything except your base games and what you purchased, which, to GOG's credit will still always work. It's only adding to the other problems like developers not caring for their product, selling it here, not patching it, having the game removed you are left with: A broken game basically because all the great patches are available, just not here, but on Steam.
I guess the takeaway lesson here is to be more selective which games you buy so you don't run into any such problems. Convincing UBI, EA, GOG, Epic or whatever other shop you can think of to change their ways, this isn't going to work. When games aren't sold developers will eventually realize which way they had best avoid to head in to stay alive. With relevant masses buying without concern this remains wishful thinking. :-)