StingingVelvet: GOG are not going to maintain two different apps for the same purpose, and I think it's silly to expect that. Steam is the massive and dominant market leader, appealing even to people who just play simple card games or item finding games, and yet it doesn't feel the need to have a low impact client. It would just be a waste of resources for GOG to develop and maintain a separate app.
Again, the thing to argue for is a better GOG Galaxy. Less resource intensive on older hardware, full Linux compatibility, etc... improving that app is the way forward, not two different apps.
We hold different opinions on this subject, personally I don't see it as something silly. Now, I am unable to tell what maintaining two programs would have meant in the long run, but choice in this matter would have been welcomed. I somehow doubt a basic tool would have kept Galaxy from improving, or that it would have required a huge amount of resources.
Regarding Galaxy, its nowhere near Steam when you look at the overall picture, I believe many would agree with that.
I'd like to see a better Galaxy, but this sure is taking a lot of time.
I do agree with these points you mention - the issue is Galaxy needs a great deal of work and dedication. As of now it is resource intensive (at times even on modern hardware), it has a plethora of bugs, no Linux support and other shortcomings. In theory it sounds nice, in practice is something completely different. The road ahead is full of challenges for Galaxy and GOG.
vv221: No. A lot of us do
not want this games client.
Not even as a downloader.
StingingVelvet: And that is silly.
It isn't, to some people Galaxy makes no sense since they find no use in it. One can easily get by without the need of a client, believe it or not.