Gudadantza: Amazing. So logging in to GOG obviously with an internet connection and an account for downloading an offline installer at least oncea year is some sort of DRM?
You are the millionth person coming up with that flawed argument, you are not the first one. The other million used the argument "electricity is DRM because you can't play without it, ha ha I am so funny".
Anyway, when talking about DRM, delivery is not part of the discussion. It is not DRM that in order to buy a game from a brick&mortar store, you actually have to carry the game to your home, or ask the post office do it. With digital games, delivery = downloading the game. So no, having to log into a GOG account in order to download a game is not DRM (and I don't think anyone claimed it is).
What is DRM though is that if you want to use that product (a downloaded game) years from now, when that store or GOG service doesn't exist anymore, you can't do it, or some of its content is missing, because you can't connect to those non-existent servers anymore.
So try to go online to unlock the CP2077 DLC, when there are no servers anymore which would unlock the DLC for you. That is DRM.
Just in case you try to come up with yet another overused argument "but you can't play the game in the future anyway if the servers are no more, because you can't download it, ha!", no, flawed argument yet again. As I said, downloading is part of the delivery, so naturally you have to deliver = download the game to yourself, before the servers and the service goes permanently offline.
It is the same that if you buy some physical retail game on some store but leave it to the store (instead of bringing it home with you), then naturally you lose access to "your" game if the store closes its doors permanently and "your" game is locked inside. You should have delivered the game to yourself when you still can. However, that is still not DRM that you can't deliver the physical game to yourself afterwards, when the store is no more.
Mori_Yuki: Even so what's the big problem with that?
Ok so first your argument was: "It is not DRM!", and now it has changed to "Ok so even if it is DRM, who cares?".
So does that mean you don't understand why many people oppose DRM, or what is your confusion? I am happy to educate you if you are just ignorant about the subject.
Note, I am not saying you SHOULD care about DRM. If you don't, I guess that is your choice. But similarly you shouldn't tell other they shouldn't care about DRM either, because you don't care either.
I am not quite sure if you don't care about DRM because you just don't understand what it means, or what its implications are.
timppu: I don't know your definition for DRM, but mine basically is "can I install and play this game 10-20 years from now on, when CDPR and GOG don't exist anymore?".
toxicTom: This too, but for me it's also: "
Can I download my game from any computer using ordinary means (browser, wget, whatever) and install and play them on another computer without any internet connection."
I don't agree with the bolded part, but let's leave it to that.
I consider that to be about convenience, than whether it is DRM-free or not. Yes it is certainly more convenient if I have more choices to the way I download my DRM-free games. I personally use mostly gogrepo.py as it is the most convenient way for me.