karnak1: GOG has been rejecting plenty of other genre games: pint n'click adventures, rogue-likes, etc.
And in all honesty, from all the "old-school dungeon-crawlers" GOG has rejected over the years (at least those I know of) Grimoire seems by far the best of the lot. The others were just mediocre cash-grabs trying to ride on the "old-school renaissance".
rjbuffchix: Fair points, but GOG does still accept point n' click adventures and roguelikes in greater numbers. For dungeon crawlers with bigger production values, Bard's Tale IV is coming up. In the last year or so there was Mary Skelter, and...? If only looking at older-style or pixelated graphics, maybe someone can stretch and argue for the expansion to Barony that released this year?
My argument is that as a consumer who likes these games, I can't help but conclude there is a bias against old-school dungeon crawlers. Because "unstable" games from other genres, as well as games "trying to ride on the 'old-school renaissance'" from other genres, do get accepted. I would be more convinced there wasn't a bias, if the discrepancy wasn't seemingly so reserved to one genre.
I understand your points. But I really don't think there's a "anti-blobber bias" on GOG's part, specifically. I'd say it's more of a "blobber bias", period.
Let's face the facts. I'm not really aware of the sales records, but I have a strong suspicion that "old-school" dungeon-crawlers are perhaps the greatest niche among RPG enthusiasts. Just recently I was browsing steam's user reviews for "Might & Magic X" (which I admit I never played), which was a massive sales flop. I always imagined that the bad reviews were due to bad gameplay and game mechanics.
Nope... it seems that most people hated the game because they were expecting some sort of "Might & Magic-Skyrim". And what they got was an hommage to the old games similar to "Grimrock". It seems the vast majority of people no longer want to move in grid-like fashion.
Again, I'm not aware of the sales, but I think that Grimrock 2 was also a flop compared to the sales of 1.
It's also a question of subjective tastes. I had no problem in paying 10$ for a DRM-free copy of Grimoire. Yet I admit I wouldn't give more than 2$ for games like Amberland, 7 Mages, The Ghost Ship or Aeons of Sand.
But GOG's "curation" isn't really limited to "blobbers". As a strategy fan I'm saddened to see that a game like
Stellar Monarch isn't here.
EDIT: I tried inserting links for some games, but GOG managed to break almost all links.
I guess that, instead of bringing more games here, GOG should really focus on fixing their site once and for all :P