RWarehall: You do know that some of those steps are probably good ones...
Especially the specific DirectX packages they are asking you to install.
Do you know why? Because those are the packages they use on their test machines and they seemed to work for them.
It is not stupid they ask this. You are stupid for disregarding it completely and just complaining you aren't getting a refund for no work. Quite a few games need specific drivers to work correctly and the "latest" packages sometimes are not as backward compatible as they claim.
DarrkPhoenix: If it were known that the game tends to have issues with certain DirectX packages (or certain other things on the list), then I'd be quite a bit more willing to try those things. As it stands, though, the game seems to have crashing issues for quite a few people, and the source of the issue has proved rather elusive, for both the user-base and the developers. So once again, the various suggestions that were listed remain highly generic, and when taken in the context of random crashes that have proved elusive for even the devs, are likely to just prove a waste of my time (as well as having the potential to cause problems with some of the many other games I have installed that are all currently working flawlessly). I don't particularly mind troubleshooting if there's a good lead on what the problem may be and it's just a few quick things to try; it's the shotgun approach (like the laundry list I was asked to run through) that I take issue with, as in my experience that tends to do nothing more than waste my time (and the extent of the list shows quite a disregard for the value of my time).
...snip...
To me that sounds like you want the game to work for you
only if you are having the same problem as everyone else. In other words, if the reason the game is not working for you is unique or rare, then you don't want the game to work for you at all.
It seems to me that if you don't help troubleshoot your circumstance, then no one else can benefit from what you are experiencing either. If you do help troubleshoot your circumstance, then maybe it would help someone else, too.
Overall, what you have described sounds to me like more of a customer's experience with purchase decisions rather than experience with customer service of trying to get something to work. I mean from reading what you've posted all that I can learn from it is that I should research about a game and whether it'll work on my system before purchasing (which is what I do already).
I think what you copy/pasted is probably posted in GOG's troubleshooting section for just about any game (which I've reviewed before purchasing games) so that info is familiar to me and I have made sure I was comfortable with the possibility before purchasing. (I have a Mac so most of that doesn't apply to me anyway. But I did find out beforehand.) What happens after that troubleshooting would be something new, would be about the customer service itself, but you are saying you aren't going to follow through with obtaining customer service. To me all of this boils down to just your experience with a purchase decision.
Not to belittle that. I mean, it's a great reminder to do research beforehand, so thank you for that reminder. I just think it would have been more helpful to have this thread titled differently to reflect that instead of implying that you had more experiences to share.
I guess I was expecting a "hero" who helped out, but maybe it didn't work out because the issues remained mysterious regardless of everything that was tried. But no, nothing was tried, there wasn't even an interest in following through. So it's more like a story from a passerby than from a participant.
I do find it interesting that having to troubleshoot was a surprise. So I do think that this is worth knowing, that more people should become informed about the possibility of troubleshooting to get the game to work to make the purchase worthwhile instead of just giving up. Perhaps this thread will help with that so more persons will research more before purchasing and also be prepared to attempt troubleshooting (or alert a dear friend of the need for an in person visit to help out with that).