TomNuke: It is a new game release here on GOG and it deserves the same treatment as any other release thread. It's also clearly marked with a warning about certain content, so if you don't like it then you can easily move along. The warned content is also optional in this case so...
It's not a "new game". There are a lot of new games I'm not interested in for many reasons, but are always worth checking out, in a "hey, a new game, what is it about" way. But when a new title is announced and you get rickrolled into a porn VN, it simply feels like entering another shop. It's a different object with a whole different function. I can dislike a random platformer or racer, but it's still, like a RTS, meant to be enjoyed without a dick in one hand and a kleenex in another, so I can understand why a videogame shop asks us if we're interested in it. And actually, there is also a difference between featuring sexual content (in a book, movie, song, game) and being a porn product. Again, not the same function.
I understand GOG makes money with that, and it's legitimate and not even in contradiction with curation. Again, I've known a video shop owner who was an avid cinephile, but admitted that his shop was making profit thanks to its backroom porn videos. That's what allowed him to curate the real movies and sell them at decent price. But still, he had them separated. We could browse movies without getting "anal underage princesses 7" between "the godfather" and "broken flowers".
Right now, gog just mixes up apples and oranges. And honestly for dumb reasons : it branches out to porn, okay, but doesn't assume it - as the reluctant and euphemistic tags show. It's certainly convenient for some customers' self-definition ("i'm, uh, buying a videogame, because it, er, the gameplay is interesting"), but it's mildly inconvenient for those who peruse gog as a videogame store.
Because "apostle: rebellion" would have sounded kinda cool for a real game's title. But nope. We're not in the real game section here. We're in the boobs slideshow section.
Surprise.
(Actually, GOG had the same problem a while ago, wen it tried to branch into movies. You saw a new title, went "hey cool, haven't heard of that game" and "oh, it's just a short film". But at least they kept the shops separated.)