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We'll be removing a number of games from the GOG.com catalog - here's your last call to get them with a special discount!

Today, we're here to honor the promise we gave you to announce ahead of time whenever we're taking a game down from sales. We wanted to give you one last chance to get the titles we're delisting with a considerable discount, and the partners involved agreed. There are 35 games on that list and you can get them all for up to 80% off until Tuesday, September 2, at 3:59AM GMT. Any title you buy will remain in your collection even after it's removed from our catalog, so you can always download and re-download the installers and bonus content. Check out the promo page to see which games this concerns.

We're still ironing out a few details. For now, the promo pages, like the one for the Last Chance Special, list all the game prices only in US dollars. But don't freak out: if you chose to use your local currency you will see the prices in local currency in checkout, and you can still finalize the transaction in local currency. We hope to have this issue fixed within the next weeks.
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Matruchus: Its hard to convince the publishers to come here when each and every gog game is available on torrents at this moment an is actively pirated. So think about that if you decide to pirate games.
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djdarko: Um... aren't all of the Single Player Steam games as well?
Yeah they are but its different when a game is pirated from a store that was founded in order to fight piracy by selling drm-free games. I mean you need to really be twisted and sick to pirate gog games.
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LeonardoCornejo:
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Matruchus: Its hard to convince the publishers to come here when each and every gog game is available on torrents at this moment an is actively pirated. So think about that if you decide to pirate games.
GOG already made a test with The Witcher 2, the first version found on torrents was no theirs, but a version with DRM, of course it was cracked, the thing is, pirate distributors enjoy cracking DRM, they take it as a game, a challenge, and since DRM treats customers like criminals (I am looking at you Diablo III) actualy some people will pick piracy only when there is not a DRM free alternative.
That would be my case, I make an oath, on the grave of my Grandfather, that I will never download a pirate copy of a game that is available on GOG at that moment, however, if it is not available (and maybe will never be) then I feel no guilt, it is the devs fault for not joining the DRM free crusade.

DRM treats the users as criminals, so why bothering with being treated as one without being one, I preffer to attone my sins once a game is released on GOG rather than buying it on Steam or, god forbids, Origin (I don't realy have anything against other retailers yet, but in such cases the game must be DRM free too).

If GOG versions of the pirated games were the norm, then in stead of a large and almost steady growing fanbase of loyalists, there would be a handfull of customers with many exploiting the DRM free system, but turns out it is not the case, with its reasonable prices (in comparisson to the competitors), its nice discounts, and its DRM free policy GOG attracts many customers who otherwise would opt for piracy, and they know it.
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djdarko: Um... aren't all of the Single Player Steam games as well?
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Matruchus: Yeah they are but its different when a game is pirated from a store that was founded in order to fight piracy by selling drm-free games. I mean you need to really be twisted and sick to pirate gog games.
It would be silly to expect GOG games not to be pirated. There will always be people that just pirate for the sake of it.

They're not lost customers though since they wouldn't buy the game no matter what.

It's the ones that pirate because there's no attractive option to them/are appaled by the business practices that you want to get.
And so far I'd say GoG has done a decent job at that.
Post edited August 29, 2014 by Reaper9988
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Matruchus: Yeah they are but its different when a game is pirated from a store that was founded in order to fight piracy by selling drm-free games. I mean you need to really be twisted and sick to pirate gog games.
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Reaper9988: It would be silly to expect GOG games not to be pirated. There will always be people that just pirate for the sake of it.

They're not lost customers though since they wouldn't buy the game no matter what.
I don't know but I really don't like such stuff like this: http://btdigg.org/search?info_hash=32bbeb3c75f664e250619c54a7ac56a894cfd240&q=good%20old%20games%20pack%201
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Matruchus: Its hard to convince the publishers to come here when each and every gog game is available on torrents at this moment an is actively pirated. So think about that if you decide to pirate games.
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djdarko: Um... aren't all of the Single Player Steam games as well?
Pretty much ALL of them. I dont see that many GOG torrents actually.
There are obviously some douchebags who actually buy the games.. then go ahead and upload them for some godawful reason i guess
Post edited August 29, 2014 by Niggles
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Matruchus: Yeah they are but its different when a game is pirated from a store that was founded in order to fight piracy by selling drm-free games. I mean you need to really be twisted and sick to pirate gog games.
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Reaper9988: It would be silly to expect GOG games not to be pirated. There will always be people that just pirate for the sake of it.

They're not lost customers though since they wouldn't buy the game no matter what.
Very true, apparently a lot of people even pirate things that are freely downloadable from the retail websites.

Free GOG games like Ultima 4 have probably been downloaded from pirate sites numerous times

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djdarko: Um... aren't all of the Single Player Steam games as well?
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Niggles: Pretty much ALL of them. I dont see that many GOG torrents actually.
There are obviously some douchebags who actually buy the games.. then go ahead and upload them for some godawful reason i guess
Yep, from what I've heard mass uploaders actually make money from some of the host sites.
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Garret02: Actually, getting those titles would be very easy. All GOG has to do is drop the "Fair Price Package". Then, there will be nothing to stop them from pricing Nordic games at the rates they want (ie 1$==1€).

[...]
Ummm... didn't I already say the exact same thing?
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djdarko: Yep, from what I've heard mass uploaders actually make money from some of the host sites.
Yah One click hosters usually give some small amount of money per so and so many downloads of files you upload for example.
Post edited August 29, 2014 by Reaper9988
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Matruchus: Why is it that only polish users agree with Americans that don't loose noting by having this website fair priced
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JMich: I'm from Greece and I also agree that there is no fair pricing. Flat pricing is not fair, regional pricing is also not fair. I keep proposing that the price of games should be in beers, but noone wants to implement that.
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Zoidberg: Games are all the same through distribution, why make a price difference? Why make some people pay more for the same thing that cost the same?
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JMich: Change the flat prices to beers, and make the same argument. $9.99 may buy 2 beers in US, 4 beers in Poland, 10 beers in India. So the $9.99 game is priced differently in different countries. Why make some people pay more for the same thing?
Which beer?

Joking apart, I'm abandonning this, noone is blinder than the one who doesn't want to see: those are NOT the same things! You cannot live on videogames, can't eat or drink them, they cannot protect you from harsh weather!

You want more buying power for luxury items? Get a better economy management and improve your country! Every country in Europe should do that... don't encourage wild capitalism though... like unfair pricing! :)
Post edited August 29, 2014 by Zoidberg
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amund: If I remember correctly, there was an interview with GOG 2 years ago about why they started the store. One of the main reasons was because piracy were very common in Poland and people were selling pirate copies. GOG wanted to offer a low price option for classic games. I think offering a low price and DRM-free is the best way to deal with piracy.
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LeonardoCornejo: Yes, but if they can't make something available then it is nither our fault nor theirs that we resort to piracy, consider DRM free stores the first resort, the second, non intrusive non restrictive DRM (I remember the time when CD games came with activation keys which could be used over and over again) and the last resort is piracy, since non intrusive non restrictive DRM is gone, we have two choices GOG and, when not available on GOG, piracy, blame those who refuse to publish their games on GOG...

Maybe GOG should use that to convince publishers, "If you sell your game with us there is a good chance piracy of that game will drop, increasing your sales and attracting low income customers".

I mean, I came here trying to leave behind a life of piracy, There is a decent amount of games I have acquired or voted in the community wishlist which I played already as pirated copies, but I do want to buy them, that is why I buy them or vote them on the wishlist hoping that someday I could buy them.

That proves that some of us actually want to buy the games, but we are out of decent options to do so.
It's a difficult balance, to make as many games available as possible while keeping both users and publishers happy. I hope many of the big games come here because I'm buying all my games on GOG now. I was planning to only buy maybe 5-10 games when I joined and now it's over 100.

I'm sure GOG do what they can to convince publishers and maybe the new pricing and Galaxy client is what is needed to bring them over. If that's what it takes to bring majority of the publishers then I can accept that as long as I get DRM-free games. If the price is too high I can wait for a discount.

But yes, I think GOG has showed the way how to deal with piracy especially with releasing Witcher games without any DRM. That's a good sign of faith in gamers and the no-DRM business practice.
So what about the support und updates for the titles which will be removed from GOG? What if some crappy Windoofus update suddenly causes i.e. Gothic 2 to crash all the time?
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Matruchus: And if nobody speaks out against the regional pricing policy slowly coming here then we shall get the usual 1$=1€ like everywhere else very fast.
And I do agree with this. But to continue the above Linux example, speak out against Unity/KDE/Gnome, not against Linux.
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Zoidberg: You want more buying power for luxury items? Get a better economy management and improve your country! Every country in Europe should do that... don't encourage wild capitalism though... like unfair pricing! :)
My reasoning is that a Luxury item should cost someone the same number of hours at minimum wage, no matter the country. If someone has to work 20 hours to buy a luxury item while someone else has to work 100 hours, then that price is not fair. The $US price may be the same in both cases, but the wage is not.

Or, to put it another way, there was a study at some point comparing the number of hours a McDonalds worker had to work to be able to afford a Big Mac. That number should have been a constant, but it wasn't. So why should someone require more work hours to buy the same thing? Isn't that unfair pricing?
Post edited August 29, 2014 by JMich
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JMich: Change the flat prices to beers, and make the same argument. $9.99 may buy 2 beers in US, 4 beers in Poland, 10 beers in India. So the $9.99 game is priced differently in different countries. Why make some people pay more for the same thing?
Actually there's good reason why physical goods in different countries cost more.
Labour/wages/Ingredients costs vary from country to country. A beer made in america should be more expensive than one in poland(although the polish one probably tastes better :P)

Of course the whole thing is mostly undermined by globalization buying and producing out of country where it's cheapest but still selling for the highest price possible.

The same just doesn't hold true for a product that's pretty cost free to duplicate and where the wage costs are pretty flat
(I assume GoG has international servers, but so far no international offices.)

If anything games should be priced by where they are made, not where they are sold.
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Matruchus: Yeah they are but its different when a game is pirated from a store that was founded in order to fight piracy by selling drm-free games. I mean you need to really be twisted and sick to pirate gog games.
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Reaper9988: It would be silly to expect GOG games not to be pirated. There will always be people that just pirate for the sake of it.

They're not lost customers though since they wouldn't buy the game no matter what.
Yup. I know some guys who download pirated games from GOG, even though they could very well afford them.
The reason is plain and simple. They're so used to piracy that they think it's almost a "given right" of them to acquire pirated stuff.

It's twisted and greedy, yes.

I admit that I once pirated a game from GOG... Xenonauts. I downloaded it because I wanted to see how the game worked out.
I enjoyed the gameplay. And as soon as the game gets a promotion I'll buy it from GOG.
Post edited August 29, 2014 by karnak1
quote Seducemepzl: Now I feel like GOG has no future because of a vocal minority of first-world Europeans and Australians who don't want to pay their normal local prices for games. Maybe I'm biased being American, but consider that I don't complain that Russians and others pay less for games. I don't complain that Europeans have received a GOG discount equal to their VAT (15-25%) for years. What I care about is DRM-free games and a better future for gamers. Prices are almost irrelevant; I can wait for a sale if a price isn't attractive to me.




I really find it quite arrogant from the citizens of U.S.A. to proclaim, how they believe regional pricing is fine, how they agree with it and how they state that the "first world" European and Australians who disagree with paying substantially higher prices are just a vocal minority.

just to inform you, a great part of Europe consist of Eastern European countries, where people live and earn not first world wages and lifes, where the standard of living is lower than in U.S.A. but that's not the point.

The point is, that people not affected by being ripped of on regular basis by companies, vote loudly for the rip off and condemn people affected for opposing it.

/satire

MY PROPOSAL for GOG future, that would bring GOG more money in general and safeguard its future in monetary means: USING FLAT PRICING BASED ON THE HIGHEST REGIONAL PRICE

that way, U.S.A. citizens and other cheapskates from low regional priced countries (i use your way of describing people who don't want to pay unwarranted high prices and being ripped of) can contribute to the survival of GOG and their financial situation the same way as European and Australian citizens. = now you might argue, but because the money paid by the European and Australian citizens goes for good part directly to the wallets of publishers instead of GOG, you might be the one, to contribute more to GOG survival and that might seem unfair. Well it would NOT be unfair, because you all state, how you are willing to pay so much more and would accept rip off pricing contrary to the cheap Europeans and Australians.


So for the record, I am all for paying the rip of prices for the games, if EVERYBODY pays them, even if that means, rewarding greedy publishers for ripping people of, just because they reside outside of U.S.A and R.F. (the main reason, the publisher don't dare ask for ridiculous pricing in United States and Russia is, that both countries are giant countries and regional powers = otherwise it would be logical, to ask FIRST WORLD country U.S.A citizens to pay regional high prices like us)


p.s. i am non native speaker, so my formulations might be harder to understand, but i hope, you people get what i mean


to sum it up- please reintroduce the flat pricing BUT with the highest regional price as base for the flat price, that way, we would keep the games greedy publishers want to take away from here or get new ones and GOG would keep the difference between low regional price and flat price (joke)