groze: Anyway, just wait a couple of weeks and [...] the next "woah, GOG, this is borderline DRM because it requires Galaxy for online play".
So, notwithstanding the fact that your bias against old-school minded users who made this site what it is, is also a form of "gate-keeping" (as you put it), I feel I need to address your above quote in particular. Because Galaxy-only multiplayer is not just "borderline" DRM. By logical standards it fits the criteria of DRM. It is not all GOG's fault; I blame developers, Scheme, and modernists who gush over every change. That is why we're at this point already
Galaxy-only multiplayer is only good for as long as you can access the internet, as long as Galaxy continues working, and as long as GOG is still around. Now, I hope GOG, meaning this store of standalone offline installers, is around forever. But hypothetically speaking, what do you think happens to Galaxy multiplayer if GOG were to someday years from now close shop, or change to a new business venture, or no longer be what it currently is for whatever reason?
I embrace the principles put forth by GOG on FCKDRM.com, because I believe game preservation is important. I am sure this probably just makes me an old fuddy-duddy stick in the mud square or whatever other pejoratives you want to throw at the scant few of us left who dare to want to have control over the things we purchase. But here is relevant language from FCKDRM.com, accessed today, just now.
"Digital Rights Management, DRM, is a really broad term for tech that controls how, and when, digital content can be used – like your games, music, video, or books.
Games with DRM include a layer of software or code on top of what's needed to just play the game. Nowadays DRM will send your information to an online server, it could run checks to see if you touched any files, or outright refuse access unless you're logged in somewhere.
Sure, DRM might not affect you right now, but corporations hold the key and they'll only let you in as long as you can repeatedly prove ownership. As long as you're connected to the internet. As long as their DRM works without fault. As long they're still around.
Support digital preservation
By choosing the right sources, you know that the content you bought will remain with you – no matter when it was created or for what hardware."
Sure sounds like the antithesis of Galaxy-only multiplayer to me.