Posted January 30, 2018
True, so you are using gogrepo too, then? :)
My GOG games (installers) are on an external hard drive, and when I get an urge to play some game, I just double-click on its installer there and it installs itself. I don't see how Galaxy would make that easier or faster for me, quite on the contrary. It is much easier this way if I just want to quickly try out some game, rather than waiting even several hours while it first downloads from the GOG servers (be it through Galaxy, or without). And, after all, "DRM-free" really makes sense only if you do keep your games (installers) locally.
Where Galaxy would make sense would be if I was playing some new-ish game which is getting critical updates quite often, then yes I'd usually prefer to play it through a client that auto-updates the game as soon as an update is available. Same goes for multiplayer games where all players have to be using the same version of the game, there auto-update is pretty much a must, at least on public servers.
But I guess my GOG gaming concentrates so much on older games that don't get much of critical updates anymore, so I wouldn't see the benefit. Like, right now I am playing Deus Ex. On Steam, I am playing Age of Empires 3 which doesn't really benefit from Steam client's autoupdate either, it is not like it is getting important updates anymore either.
But as I keep saying, I am not really against Galaxy, and the only reason I don't have it installed at the moment is because to my knowledge it would interfere with my manually installed GOG games (ie. their shortcuts would launch Galaxy if it is installed to the system, which is something I DON'T want to do just in order to play Deus Ex or whatever).
EDIT: This actually shows the benefit of GOG, different people with different kinds of desires can have their own way (quite often). People who want it "the Steam way" where their games are listed in one client and they just click on it to download and install it, get it that way. I prefer having standalone installers on my local hard drives and keep them up to date and not having to use an online client to play them, and I get that too (albeit I do use a third-party tool for it, gogrepo).
I can't achieve the same in e.g. Steam (I have no idea of a system which would download all my Steam games in neat installers or even zip packets so that I could install and play them locally), and even in Humble Store I'd have to download all my installers one by one (there was a rumor of a gogrepo-like tool also for Humble Store, but not sure what its status is now).
The only fear I have is can GOG keep doing this, providing two or several different ways to manage and use your GOG games?
My GOG games (installers) are on an external hard drive, and when I get an urge to play some game, I just double-click on its installer there and it installs itself. I don't see how Galaxy would make that easier or faster for me, quite on the contrary. It is much easier this way if I just want to quickly try out some game, rather than waiting even several hours while it first downloads from the GOG servers (be it through Galaxy, or without). And, after all, "DRM-free" really makes sense only if you do keep your games (installers) locally.
Where Galaxy would make sense would be if I was playing some new-ish game which is getting critical updates quite often, then yes I'd usually prefer to play it through a client that auto-updates the game as soon as an update is available. Same goes for multiplayer games where all players have to be using the same version of the game, there auto-update is pretty much a must, at least on public servers.
But I guess my GOG gaming concentrates so much on older games that don't get much of critical updates anymore, so I wouldn't see the benefit. Like, right now I am playing Deus Ex. On Steam, I am playing Age of Empires 3 which doesn't really benefit from Steam client's autoupdate either, it is not like it is getting important updates anymore either.
But as I keep saying, I am not really against Galaxy, and the only reason I don't have it installed at the moment is because to my knowledge it would interfere with my manually installed GOG games (ie. their shortcuts would launch Galaxy if it is installed to the system, which is something I DON'T want to do just in order to play Deus Ex or whatever).
EDIT: This actually shows the benefit of GOG, different people with different kinds of desires can have their own way (quite often). People who want it "the Steam way" where their games are listed in one client and they just click on it to download and install it, get it that way. I prefer having standalone installers on my local hard drives and keep them up to date and not having to use an online client to play them, and I get that too (albeit I do use a third-party tool for it, gogrepo).
I can't achieve the same in e.g. Steam (I have no idea of a system which would download all my Steam games in neat installers or even zip packets so that I could install and play them locally), and even in Humble Store I'd have to download all my installers one by one (there was a rumor of a gogrepo-like tool also for Humble Store, but not sure what its status is now).
The only fear I have is can GOG keep doing this, providing two or several different ways to manage and use your GOG games?
Post edited January 30, 2018 by timppu