real.geizterfahr: And here we are again. The ship isn't singleplayer content. It's a multiplayer reward that you can use in singleplayer.
I said quintessentially, because there is nothing
inherently multiplayer about that content, and indeed it works fine in single player after you've gotten your pass through the DRM once. The fact that someone just arbitrarily decided to disable certain items in a shop when offline and made some drop very rare in single player doesn't really make the locked content any different from normal single player content.
Stupid decision, yes. But with two seperate entries for singleplayer and multiplayer in the main menu, the ship wouldn't be available in singleplayer anymore. And that would really remove the DRM (GOG's definition of DRM)?
Honestly if we're following GOG's arbitrary made-up definitions of DRM-free then anything might be DRM-free. The only reason we're having this discussion at all is because GOG allows DRM and calls it DRM-free. Now they have to draw the line. They set themselves up for this, knowing that a lot of games have multiplayer exclusive content.
That's why I'm not really taking part in this discussion, because it is so absurd. A game with DRM in multiplayer is never going to be fully DRM-free unless that DRM is removed. Playing tricks like adding separate menu items for offline/online modes and disabling content in one mode can only work if you're trying to weasel out of a shitty situation caused by stupid definitions. As you said, doing this does not truly remove any DRM at all, it's at best good for maintaining a lie.
If we want a clear line, then that line is NO DRM at all.
All content is accessible by players without having to seek permission from GOG's or third parties' services.
But what happens when other games start to put more and more content into their seamless multiplayer, starting to cripple singleplayer for it?
Yeah, that's the danger when you define DRM in multiplayer = no DRM. It doesn't even need to be "seamless", just call it multiplayer.
This would never be a problem if GOG just meant DRM-free when they say DRM-free.