lolprings: i don't get it, so companys are ok with Gog selling their games for ass cheap
Yes and no. Some companies are willing to allow GOG to sell their games, some aren't.
Let me simplify:
-GOG is a marketplace, gets a cut of all sales
-games are the products (the actual product is the license which allows us to play the games legally)
-companies are the producers of said product, they decide prices of their games
-us gamers are the final consumers
The marketplace sells us game licenses which give us the right to play the games we paid for, within the limit of the licenses. The marketplace must strike a deal with the producers to be allowed to sell the licenses.
GOG is a peculiar marketplace that sells licenses with the condition that
no DRM is to be forced upon the consumers.
GOG wants to be a time capsule of the old times, before Steam, when you bought a game you had a phisical copy that you colud use to install the game where you wanted, as many times as you wanted without anybody bothering you.
This can be abused (install the game on several computers) but GOG allows us to make the choice to be honest or pirates and some companies won't stand for that.
DRM is a component that doesn't allow us the choice to be pirates, but also can be harmful by reducing overall performance or behaving like malware.
Many companies want money rather than satisfied customers so they add DRM, microtransactions, gambling/lootboxes and bad DLC to their games. GOG won't stand for that and so no deal can be made.
I suggest watching some Jim Sterling on youtube to inform youself, if you want to.
In summary, some companies are willing so deal with GOG, some aren't.
Prices are decided by the companies, what you see is what they want.
Most triple A companies deserve the crap they get for unethical behaviour.