Kristian: What happens when the next developer wants it that way and then the next and the next. They agreed to let THQ do this and now they will have to agree to let anyone else do this and so now now otherwise reluctant company will EVER agree to DRM free/cross-platform games. Given the bad effect on GOG it would not at all surprise me if this place had to shut down within a year :(
amok: I do not see this have any effect on gog at all, it is two completely different things. (they stopped selling apples, so we will no longer eat oranges)
Sure it will, companies are already hesitant to sign up to GOG due to their DRM free stance, this will give them more ammo to refuse GOG. They will point to this bundle and say that even those guys, who otherwise also were "fanatical" about a DRM free stance, were willing to be "practical" and "reasonable" in order to sign up THQ.
So GOG will have an even harder time signing up developers and publishers. Which could mean games drying up on GOG, in the worst(and therefore most likely) case doing GOG in.
Kristian: They can say so all they want but this WILL hurt the normal bundles since no otherwise reluctant developer will EVER agree to do a DRM free/cross-platform debut for a Humble Bundle ever again.
amok: If HiB put it as an condition on the next bundle, and the developer refuses, then HiB can just show them the door... HiB is a quite strong brand now, they can do quite a lot of things as they like, I do not see them having any problems at all getting developers who would agree...
They COULD do that, but now they let THQ in. Other developers and publishers aren't going to agree to their terms now. They want to be treated equally with THQ.