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Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment comes to GOG.com.

We're on a roll! We're happy to announce that Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment joins the GOG.com catalog to make the world of DRM-free gaming that much better today. We're starting off with six widely requested titles:

Let's start big:
<span class="bold">Mortal Kombat 1+2+3</span> just got the GOG.com treatment. If you were having a hard time getting these notorious bits of gaming history to run on your computer, boy do we have a surprise for you!

We're also launching these five heavily requested titles with big, weeklong discounts:

LEGO Batman: The Videogame -50%
LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1 - 4 -60%
LEGO Harry Potter: Years 5 - 7 -60%
F.E.A.R. Platinum -50%
Bastion -60%

It's yet another great start to yet another great publisher debut on GOG.com, let's get our fill!
There's a whole lot that I can say to this, but instead I'll just say 'thank you': I've wanted to play F.E.A.R. and Bastion for awhile now, especially F.E.A.R., but didn't want to give money to Valve.
Will GOG get the other FEAR sequels as well?
So now we have Disney and WB can we have LEGO Indie and Star Wars..... Please.

Also I was planning on playing my HB/Steam copy of FEAR, but now it is here I can just forgo that and pick it up on discount. So please bring FEAR 2 and 3 here soon.
FEAR is too awesome to pass up; I'll have to grab a copy tomorrow.

It would be cool to see FEAR 2 (and its DLC, I suppose) on GOG at some point, although I couldn't care less about FEAR 3.
Just looking at the front page again... this is a HUGE step in the right direction. I can't believe we actually got Warner Bros. games! :D
Thank you for this. My Fear Platinum disks don't work on W8.1. I got the Steam version but I hate DRM. Bought it on GOG and was so excited seeing it on here. Thank you for making me buy the game for a 3rd time
LEGO!!

One is never too old for Lego, be it the plastic squares you step on when barefoot, or the video games. :D

Will more Lego be coming soon? :D
Awesome! Hopping Batman AA, AC, AO, will be released here soon.
Will be getting F.E.A.R to replace steam version like i did with star wars releases.
Post edited February 13, 2015 by HG1995
While we're on the topic of super awesome (apparently) entertainment conglomerates, how about GOG + MGM release Wargames the RTS?
Wow, this was unexpected and a nice surprise. Now I want to kick myself for buying F.E.A.R. on Steam during their winter sale. I think this might be the first time that has occurred for me.

I actually owned MK1 for DOS back in the day. Played it a ton with my Gravis Gamepad plugged into my dual gameport card. I'm pretty sure I needed a bootdisk in order to have enough free RAM. To me, it was the closest you could get to the arcade compared to the other home conversions. I can't think of any that would have been better at the time.
Great "get", GOG! (Giggity!)
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opticq: When have these LEGO games been offered DRM free?
On disc. The litmus test for them will be starting from LEGO Marvel Super Heroes, because it was from that point onwards that they started requiring Steam on the disc versions too, so it will be interesting to see if we get LEGO Super Marvel Super Heroes, LEGO The Hobbit and LEGO Batman 3.
Post edited February 13, 2015 by jamyskis
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opticq: Well I consider a disc check a form of DRM, so this seems like the only true DRM-free release of any of TT Games' LEGO games.
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yyahoo: DRM is in the eye of the beholder...

I'm on the bandwagon that says if I can install and play a game without the need to go online and activate it in some way, then it's DRM-free. If you want to get strict, you could argue that the codewheels from PC games in the 80's were DRM.

{shrug}
Sadly, while DRM means "digital rights management" which does have a specific meaning, all too often the layperson gamer randomly defines DRM whimsically as being "any quality, property, feature, or inconvenience that I personally consider a game to have subjectively or otherwise, is DRM" making the actual term fairly meaningless in casual chat that does not involve actual intellectual property lawyers. People end up arguing over the use of the term which could completely be avoided in almost all instances by substituting "a feature or property I consider inconvenient to the ownership and enjoyment of the game as a consumer" instead of using the term "DRM" in a manner that may be technically or legally inaccurate.
I'm hoping Watchmen: The End is Nigh ends up here at some point. It was a surprisingly good brawler and I would love to own a DRM-free copy.
WB bought midway right? Psi-Ops, The Suffering, and Stranglehold PLZZZZZZZ