Siannah: Otherwise you wouldn't dismiss my opinion and insist that yours is without flaw nor potential fault.
Strange you should mention that because I seem recall someone in this thread dismissing anything out of hand that didn't fit their personal narrative.
Siannah: Any dependance regarding digital games and downloading them, is going to bite someone somewhere, sooner or later. No matter which service one prefers.
Siannah: Once more, same for every digital distributor. Replace Steam with GOG, Uplay, Origin, iTunes, whatever - all come with the same problems.
how's that a long-term solution for everyone? It certainly isn't for me, sry.
Again, if going with a worst case scenario, do it for both sides or not at all. Everything else throws your comparison as pointless out of the window.
Siannah: No. Not feasible. Not for me.
Siannah: I don't. And how, when and for how long I play my games, is really none of your concern nor has it anything to do with the topic at hand.
Siannah: Really now? With all due respect, check in what context statements have been made. This can get to a point, where I see it as simply not feasible anymore. Is that feasible and the best solution any gamer should want? Not for me, sry.
1.You claim backing up GOG installers is in your words, "Not feasible."
2.Myself and other poster gave solutions how one could easily backup GOG installers.
3.You respond with inferences that because DRM free services & backup media are potentially unreliable, and that hardware is expensive & subject to failure so one should bother to use or consider alternatives.
But yet I'm the one that dismisses others' opinions and insist that mine is without flaw nor potential fault?...
I'm just going to leave this at "agreeing to disagree" and leave it at that. If anyone else is interested whether or not it's "feasible" to backup all of one's GOG & other DRM free installers, there's more than enough information for one to make that determination for themselves. With that I will bow out...