Posted October 06, 2020
high rated
It's disappointing that GOG hasn't responded to this any further since their last posts on Friday. Disappointing, but not surprising. There's no way to reconcile claiming to be anti-DRM and pro-gamer as core values while at the same time selling DRM'ed games for the Epic Store.
And the notion that "GOG", "GOG.com" and "GOG Galaxy" are now suddenly three distinctly separate things is laughable. Nobody considered them separate entities before and GOG never said or did anything to suggest that they were - quite the opposite in fact, considering all they've done to make Galaxy the primary focus of everything GOG over the past ~5 years or so and how hard they've tried to foist it upon everyone who uses GOG. It's just a poor attempt at obfuscating and excusing their hypocrisy and the dropping of the last of their core values.
I've been a gamer long before Steam came about, I saw how it rose to dominance and evolved over time. Epic are much worse.
Publisher: "Hi <GOG customer>, you can already buy <game> from GOG by enabling <store>. Here's how: ..."
Also:
Publisher's social media: "Great news, you can now buy <game> through GOG! Here's how: ..."
And:
GOG customer: "But I want a DRM-free version with offline installers..."
Publisher: "(GOG tells us this group represents only a tiny minority of their userbase; we already target the majority via our Epic exclusivity deal. Conclusion: not worth the effort.)
Hi <GOG customer>, we have no plans to release <game> directly on GOG at this time. However you can still buy and play <game> through GOG from <store> and not have to deal with <store>'s client other than having it installed. Here's how: ..."
And the notion that "GOG", "GOG.com" and "GOG Galaxy" are now suddenly three distinctly separate things is laughable. Nobody considered them separate entities before and GOG never said or did anything to suggest that they were - quite the opposite in fact, considering all they've done to make Galaxy the primary focus of everything GOG over the past ~5 years or so and how hard they've tried to foist it upon everyone who uses GOG. It's just a poor attempt at obfuscating and excusing their hypocrisy and the dropping of the last of their core values.
adamhm: And to top it all off, to do this with Epic's store in particular? Who have employed such scummy practices that it would have been less egregious if GOG had announced this deal with Steam!
§pectre: Steam has been worse but has more features and cheaper games. The way some people are complaining in this thread makes them look willfully ignorant. §pectre: It depends if there is a drm free clause in this deal and easy gog conversion from the Epic files.
There isn't - if there was such an arrangement involved then GOG would be making a HUGE deal about it. Gersen: ...only peoples that will see those games are Epic customers that have enabled Epic store integration on Galaxy (So only a small percentage of the Epic market share), so if publishers wants to access the full Gog market share then they will still need to release the game on Gog proper.
GOG customer: "Hey <publisher>, how about releasing <game> on GOG?" Publisher: "Hi <GOG customer>, you can already buy <game> from GOG by enabling <store>. Here's how: ..."
Also:
Publisher's social media: "Great news, you can now buy <game> through GOG! Here's how: ..."
And:
GOG customer: "But I want a DRM-free version with offline installers..."
Publisher: "(GOG tells us this group represents only a tiny minority of their userbase; we already target the majority via our Epic exclusivity deal. Conclusion: not worth the effort.)
Hi <GOG customer>, we have no plans to release <game> directly on GOG at this time. However you can still buy and play <game> through GOG from <store> and not have to deal with <store>'s client other than having it installed. Here's how: ..."
Post edited October 06, 2020 by adamhm