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Could someone help guide me on this problem? I contacted support but it was no help.
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Ax3ra: Could someone help guide me on this problem? I contacted support but it was no help.
Did you download the web installer again like it asked and run it?
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Ax3ra: Could someone help guide me on this problem? I contacted support but it was no help.
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Braggadar: Did you download the web installer again like it asked and run it?
Yes I have
How about simply fully uninstalling Galaxy first and then reinstalling?
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Braggadar: How about simply fully uninstalling Galaxy first and then reinstalling?
I was never even able to install it.
Due to the error.
Post edited June 02, 2020 by Ax3ra
So you downloaded the web installer, and it failed to install Galaxy properly at all. And you re-downloaded the web installer and tried again?

Hmm.

I'd say it's an issue with the web installer contacting the GOG server. Did it get anywhere through the installation before failing?

If it can't contact the GOG servers itself the installer is going to fail. Potentially this would be due to your firewall blocking the installer proper access, or it's quarantining/deleting files before they can be used. Check your antiviral logs and look for any indications it has done this.
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Braggadar: So you downloaded the web installer, and it failed to install Galaxy properly at all. And you re-downloaded the web installer and tried again?

Hmm.

I'd say it's an issue with the web installer contacting the GOG server. Did it get anywhere through the installation before failing?

If it can't contact the GOG servers itself the installer is going to fail. Potentially this would be due to your firewall blocking the installer proper access, or it's quarantining/deleting files before they can be used. Check your antiviral logs and look for any indications it has done this.
I turned off my anti virus, and it still did not work. And it did not get anywhere before failing.
How stable is your internet connection? Do you get regular drop-outs?

Other than that I wouldn't have a clue, mate.

Just in case you're not aware:
You actually don't need Galaxy for the majority of games from GOG.com, especially if you're playing single-player.
1. Go to https://www.gog.com/account
2. Click on the game in your library
3. Click on Download Offline Backup Game Installers
4. Download each of the installer packages you need
5. Install the game. Play the game after installation is finished.

The client allows for achievements and other things, but it's not necessary if you're just wanting to play the game.
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Braggadar: How stable is your internet connection? Do you get regular drop-outs?

Other than that I wouldn't have a clue, mate.

Just in case you're not aware:
You actually don't need Galaxy for the majority of games from GOG.com, especially if you're playing single-player.
1. Go to https://www.gog.com/account
2. Click on the game in your library
3. Click on Download Offline Backup Game Installers
4. Download each of the installer packages you need
5. Install the game. Play the game after installation is finished.

The client allows for achievements and other things, but it's not necessary if you're just wanting to play the game.
I have no games in my library because I was not able to link any of my accounts due to the launcher not working.
And I have very stable internet.
Post edited June 02, 2020 by Ax3ra
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Ax3ra: I have no games in my library because I was not able to link any of my accounts due to the launcher not working.
And I have very stable internet.
So you wanted to use Galaxy as a singular client to catalogue all your games in one place? That's cool. But I really can't help you beyond this, mate. As you can appreciate, I'm not a staff member, just an occasional forumite.
I've had the same issue just now. None of the online installers are working and are failing immediately with the "Something went wrong" error message.

There is an offline installer for GoG Galaxy that worked fine for me.
Unfortunately, I am not allowed to post links yet so you will need to sear for the thead "Is there an offline installer for Galaxy 2.0?" on this form / Google.
Post edited September 20, 2020 by D4rkE4gle
I'm getting this crap, too, with every single GOG installer I download. There is cerrtainly nothing wrong with my Internet connection. It's high-speed and reliable.

My first guess is it's something to do with Windows Firewall (which is not something I mess with much). Just about every other software company on the Internet sends you mini-installers that pull the content to install down after run the installer, just like GOG does, but they work and GOG's does not. Hmph.

UPDATE: See my next post for detailed fix.
Post edited December 30, 2020 by Darklocq
I worked out how to get around this problem. It IS firewall stuff. I don't know why GOG's installer isn't smart enough to ask you if you want it to set up Windows Firewall exceptions for the parts it needs (and I would guess that most users don't have this problem because they have local or group policy settings that are lax). I also don't know why GOG Galaxy is an installer inside an installer inside an installer. That's stupid, and looks like a trojan (inside another trojan), which may be why the system is thwarting it.

1. Download the base installer, "GOG_Galaxy_2.0.exe".
2. Run it. It will die with an very unhelpful error message that "something went wrong". Do NOT close the error window yet.
3. Open the Task Manager (Ctrl-Shift-Esc). Find "GOG Galaxy - Web Installer" in the process list, right click it, and pick "Open file location".
4. In Windows Explorer, you will now be in a directory with a name that changes every time; it will be something like: "%USERNAME%\AppData\Local\Temp\GalaxyInstaller_Xxxxx", where "Xxxxx" is random gibberish.
5. Go up one directory level, and copy (not cut) this entire "GalaxyInstaller_Xxxxx", and paste it into your Downloads folder or onto your Desktop (or where ever).
6. Close the "something went wrong" error window. That also closes GOG_Galaxy_2.0.exe, and deletes the original "...\Temp\GalaxyInstaller_Xxxxx" temporary folder.
7. Go into your copied "GalaxyInstaller_Xxxxx", and run "GalaxyInstaller.exe"
8. VERY QUICKLY, copy-paste the GalaxySetup.exe that appears. You must do this before another "Something went wrong" error pops up. You'll know it worked right if you can successfully run that copied application. If you get an error about it not being runnable, you didn't do the paste fast enough. If you can't do it successfully after several tries, start up a bunch of heavy-duty applications to bog your system down to a crawl (like run several major games at once, open 5 browsers, run all Office apps at once, or whatever). That should give you time to copy the file. Then you can close all those apps down.
9. Dismiss any open "Something went wrong" error.
10. Run your "GalaxySetup - Copy.exe", probably as an administrator, since this is the real installer. This will, finally, install "C:\Program Files (x86)\GOG Galaxy\".
11a. open Windows Firewall ("Windows Defender Firewall with Advanced Security" – name may vary by OS version). Click "Outbound Rules" (you may have to first pick "Advanced settings" to get to this part, if you are coming in through "Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Windows Defender Firewall"), then "New Rule...". Select Program, click Next, select "This program path:", navigate to "C:\Program Files (x86)\GOG Galaxy\GalaxyClient.exe", press Open, click Next, select "Allow the connection", click Next, turn on at least the first two of these, or all three if this is on a laptop, click Next, give the rule a sensible name like "GOG GalaxyClient.exe". Repeat this process for "C:\Program Files (x86)\GOG Galaxy\GalaxyClient Helper.exe", and "GalaxyClientService.exe" in the same folder. It does not appear necessary (or desirable) to make matching Inbound Rules entries (GOG has no legit reason to be reaching out and forcing stuff onto your system). Close Windows Firewall when done.
11b. Alternatively, you can open "Allow an app through Windows Firewall" (Control Panel\System and Security\Windows Defender Firewall\Allowed apps), click "Change settings", click "Allow another app...", click "Browse", navigate to "C:\Program Files (x86)\GOG Galaxy\GalaxyClient.exe", click Open, click Add, find "GOG Galaxy" in the list, and make sure it is enabled and permits at least Private (also Public, if on a laptop). Repeat this for "GalaxyClient Helper.exe" (shows up in the list as "GOG Galaxy Installer"), and "GalaxyClientService.exe". Click OK to close "Allowed apps".
11c. Alternatively, if you use some third-party firewall app, do the roughly equivalent steps to enable these GOG applications to communicate with websites. Without doing packet sniffing, we don't know what exact domain names or IP addresses they want to communicate with, and given that the company keeps changing them, that is not likely to ever be a finite list anyway. Just let the apps do what they want when it comes to going online.
12. In "C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\GOG.com\", right-click on the "GOG Galaxy" shortcut, pick Properties, in the Shortcut tab click Advanced, and turn on "Run as administrator"; click OK, then OK. This step may not be strictly necessary, but as Galaxy is going to give you options about where to install games, and some locations may require admin access, it is best if this game management app, like Steam, runs as administrator. (If you can't see "C:\ProgramData\" at all, you need to go to "File Explorer Options" (via Control Panel or Start menu search), pick the View tab, then turn on "Show hidden files, folders, and drives", and turn off "Hide protected operating system files".)
13. Now run your installed GOG Galaxy from Start > Programs > GOG.com, log in, and install your games and stuff. It should also work with any download net installers for specific games ("GOG_Galaxy_The_Witcher_Enhanced_Edition.exe", etc.). Try one to make sure.
14. You can now throw away "GOG_Galaxy_2.0.exe" and your copy of "GalaxyInstaller_Xxxxx".
15. After you install a game, you might have to also add a firewall rule for it specifically, though hopefully the GOG Galaxy installers are smart enough to do this for you. If they're not (in general or for your particular firewall), be aware that some games have more than one executable.

[Revised 2020-01-03.]

Hope this helps.
Post edited January 03, 2021 by Darklocq
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Darklocq: I worked out how to get around this problem. It IS firewall stuff. I don't know why GOG's installer isn't smart enough to ask you if you want it to set up Windows Firewall exceptions for the parts it needs (and I would guess that most users don't have this problem because they have local or group policy settings that are lax). I also don't know why GOG Galaxy is an installer inside an installer inside an installer. That's stupid, and looks like a trojan (inside another trojan), which may be why the system is thwarting it.

1. Download the base installer, "GOG_Galaxy_2.0.exe".
2. Run it. It will die with an very unhelpful error message that "something went wrong". Do NOT close the error window yet.
3. Open the Task Manager (Ctrl-Shift-Esc). Find "GOG Galaxy - Web Installer" in the process list, right click it, and pick "Open file location".
4. In Windows Explorer, you will now be in a directory with a name that changes every time; it will be something like: "%USERNAME%\AppData\Local\Temp\GalaxyInstaller_Xxxxx", where "Xxxxx" is random gibberish.
5. Go up one directory level, and copy (not cut) this entire "GalaxyInstaller_Xxxxx", and paste it into your Downloads folder or onto your Desktop (or where ever).
6. Close the "something went wrong" error window. That also closes GOG_Galaxy_2.0.exe, and deletes the original "...\Temp\GalaxyInstaller_Xxxxx" temporary folder.
7. Go into your copied "GalaxyInstaller_Xxxxx", and run "GalaxyInstaller.exe"
8. VERY QUICKLY, copy-paste the GalaxySetup.exe that appears. You must do this before another "Something went wrong" error pops up. You'll know it worked right if you can successfully run that copied application. If you get an error about it not being runnable, you didn't do the paste fast enough. If you can't do it successfully after several tries, start up a bunch of heavy-duty applications to bog your system down to a crawl (like run several major games at once, open 5 browsers, run all Office apps at once, or whatever). That should give you time to copy the file. Then you can close all those apps down.
9. Dismiss any open "Something went wrong" error.
10. Run your "GalaxySetup - Copy.exe", probably as an administrator, since this is the real installer. This will, finally, install "C:\Program Files (x86)\GOG Galaxy\".
11a. open Windows Firewall ("Windows Defender Firewall with Advanced Security" – name may vary by OS version). Click "Outbound Rules" (you may have to first pick "Advanced settings" to get to this part, if you are coming in through "Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Windows Defender Firewall"), then "New Rule...". Select Program, click Next, select "This program path:", navigate to "C:\Program Files (x86)\GOG Galaxy\GalaxyClient.exe", press Open, click Next, select "Allow the connection", click Next, turn on at least the first two of these, or all three if this is on a laptop, click Next, give the rule a sensible name like "GOG GalaxyClient.exe". Repeat this process for "C:\Program Files (x86)\GOG Galaxy\GalaxyClient Helper.exe", and "GalaxyClientService.exe" in the same folder. It does not appear necessary (or desirable) to make matching Inbound Rules entries (GOG has no legit reason to be reaching out and forcing stuff onto your system). Close Windows Firewall when done.
11b. Alternatively, you can open "Allow an app through Windows Firewall" (Control Panel\System and Security\Windows Defender Firewall\Allowed apps), click "Change settings", click "Allow another app...", click "Browse", navigate to "C:\Program Files (x86)\GOG Galaxy\GalaxyClient.exe", click Open, click Add, find "GOG Galaxy" in the list, and make sure it is enabled and permits at least Private (also Public, if on a laptop). Repeat this for "GalaxyClient Helper.exe" (shows up in the list as "GOG Galaxy Installer"), and "GalaxyClientService.exe". Click OK to close "Allowed apps".
11c. Alternatively, if you use some third-party firewall app, do the roughly equivalent steps to enable these GOG applications to communicate with websites. Without doing packet sniffing, we don't know what exact domain names or IP addresses they want to communicate with, and given that the company keeps changing them, that is not likely to ever be a finite list anyway. Just let the apps do what they want when it comes to going online.
12. In "C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\GOG.com\", right-click on the "GOG Galaxy" shortcut, pick Properties, in the Shortcut tab click Advanced, and turn on "Run as administrator"; click OK, then OK. This step may not be strictly necessary, but as Galaxy is going to give you options about where to install games, and some locations may require admin access, it is best if this game management app, like Steam, runs as administrator. (If you can't see "C:\ProgramData\" at all, you need to go to "File Explorer Options" (via Control Panel or Start menu search), pick the View tab, then turn on "Show hidden files, folders, and drives", and turn off "Hide protected operating system files".)
13. Now run your installed GOG Galaxy from Start > Programs > GOG.com, log in, and install your games and stuff. It should also work with any download net installers for specific games ("GOG_Galaxy_The_Witcher_Enhanced_Edition.exe", etc.). Try one to make sure.
14. You can now throw away "GOG_Galaxy_2.0.exe" and your copy of "GalaxyInstaller_Xxxxx".
15. After you install a game, you might have to also add a firewall rule for it specifically, though hopefully the GOG Galaxy installers are smart enough to do this for you. If they're not (in general or for your particular firewall), be aware that some games have more than one executable.

[Revised 2020-01-03.]

Hope this helps.
what the actual fuck.... How did ou managed to think this all of?
high rated
Hi,

The post prior didn't help me so I looked into this and this is what I found.

This didn't work for me since it seems there's an issue with the webinstaller, the way to resolve this is to have .netframework 3.5 and 4.8 installed first. Once that's installed run the galaxy installer and go to %USERNAME%\AppData\Local\Temp\ like the previous post said. Copy the folder inside that is something like GalaxyInstaller_XXXXX to some other location and close the web installer.
Open the folder you just copied and find and open the file remoteconfig.json, it should have something like this:

"osx": {
"size": 257166929,
"version": "2.0.46.129",
"deprecated": false,
"downloadLink": "https:\/\/content-system.gog.com\/open_link\/download?path=\/open\/galaxy\/client\/2.0.46.129\/galaxy_client_ 2.0.46.129.pkg",
"installerMd5": "397f1339ba520d9cb77fb3a4cc674cff"
},
"windows": {
"size": 282321248,
"version": "2.0.46.133",
"deprecated": false,
"downloadLink": "https:\/\/content-system.gog.com\/open_link\/download?path=\/open\/galaxy\/client\/2.0.46.133\/setup_galaxy_2 .0.46.133.exe",
"installerMd5": "31c67f9322ebb6601ae7f485e0ffd5ed"
}

If you have windows then use the downloadLink for windows, otherwise use the one under osx.
Once you have this download link, copy it to notepad and replace all the \/(double forward slash) with /(single forward slash) and put the link in your browser, this link would download the offline installer for gog galaxy.

If this doesn't work try to look into C:\programdata\GOG.com\Galaxy\logs for the error and post here.
Post edited March 12, 2022 by BunchoCats