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Hey Goggers;

As many of you know, we announced on last Friday that we are going to introduce regional pricing for 3 new games coming up on GOG.com soon. Looking at the amount of reactions (over 3,500 comments at this very moment), it is obvious that this change is making many of you guys worried. We must have failed to clearly explain why our pricing policy for (some) newer games will change and what this means as a matter of fact for our PC & MAC classic games, which account for over 80% of our catalogue.

To be honest, our announcement was a bit vague simply because our future pricing policy is not 100% set in stone yet and we were just worried to make any promises before it was. You know, GOG.com has been growing quickly (thanks to you!), and the more we grow, the more we are worried to make some of you guys disappointed. This is why we were so (over-)cautious with our announcement.

We should have just been upfront about why we've made these changes and what they mean for us in the future and what we're planning. So let's talk. To be clear: what I'm talking about below is our plan. It's a plan that we believe we can accomplish, but while it's what we want to do with GOG, it may change some before it actually sees the light of day. Please don’t blame me for talking open-heartedly today and telling you about the plans and pricing policy we want to fight for and eventually achieve. The below plans aren't sure. The only guarantee I can give you is that we’ll do our best to fight for gamers while still making sure GOG.com as a whole grows (because well, we still want to be around 50 years from now, you know!). So, enough for the introduction, let’s get things started.

Why does GOG.com need to offer newer games at all?

We've been in business for 5 years now, and we've signed a big percentage of all of the classic content that can be legally untangled. There are still some big companies left we're trying to bring into the GOG.com fold, like LucasArts, Microsoft, Take2 and Bethesda, but what classic titles will we sign in the future once we have those partners on-board? We need to sign newer games or else just fire everyone and keep selling the same limited catalog. Either we bring you “not so old” releases from 2010+ or brand-new AAA titles, because these will become classic games tomorrow. It’s as simple as that.

Also, well, we want to expand beyond just classic games, hence the fact we have been offering you brand-new indie releases for almost 2 years now. Why expanding? Well, obviously, because the more games we sell, the more legitimacy we have on the market and the more likely it is that we can achieve our mission: making all PC & MAC video games 100% DRM-free, whether classic or brand-new titles.

To be straightforward (excuse my French):DRM is shit-- we'll never have any of it. It treats legitimate customers like rubbish and pirates don't have to bother with it. It's bad for gamers, and it's also bad for business and our partners. We want to make it easy and convenient for users to buy and play games; rather than give piracy a try. Happy gamers equals a healthy gaming industry; and this is what we fight for. Anyway, I am sure you well know our opinions about DRM.

To make the world of gaming DRM-free, we need to convince top-tier publishers & developers to give us a try with new games, just like they did with classic games. We need to make more case studies for the gaming industry, just like we successfully did back in 2011 with The Witcher 2. It was our first ever 100% DRM-free AAA day-1 release. GOG.com was the 2nd best-selling digital distribution platform worldwide for this title thanks to you guys, despite having regional prices for it. We need more breakthroughs like this to be able to show all the devs and publishers in our industry that DRM-free digital distribution is actually good for their business and their fans. And when I say breakthroughs, I am talking about really kick-ass games, with a potential metacritic score of 85% or more, AA+ and AAA kind of titles.

And this is exactly why we signed those 3 games we told you about last Friday. We believe those 3 games can be massive hits for hardcore gamers, that they can help us spread the DRM-free model among the industry for newer games and we did our best to convince their rights holders to give GOG.com a try. One of those games, as you see already, is Age of Wonders 3. We're planning more titles even beyond these first 3 soon.

Alright, but why is regional pricing needed for those (only 3 so far!) newer games then?

First of all, you have to be aware of an important fact when it comes to newer games: GOG.com cannot really decide what the prices should be. Top-tier developers and publishers usually have contractual obligations with their retail partners that oblige them to offer the game at the same price digitally and in retail. When they don’t have such contractual obligations, they are still encouraged to do so, or else their games might not get any exposure on the shelves in your favorite shops. This will change over time (as digital sales should overtake retail sales in the near future), but as of today, this is still a problem our industry is facing because retail is a big chunk of revenue and there’s nothing GOG.com can do to change that. We need to charge the recommended retail price for the boxed copies of the games in order for developers (or publishers) to either not get sued or at least get their games visible on shelves. You may recall that our sister company CD Projekt RED got sued for that in the past and we don’t want our partners to suffer from that too.

On top of that, you have to know that there are still many top-tier devs and publishers that are scared about DRM-free gaming. They're half-convinced it will make piracy worse, and flat pricing means that we're also asking them to earn less, too. Earn less, you say? Why is that? Well, when we sell a game in the EU or UK, VAT gets deducted from the price before anyone receives any profit. That means we're asking our partners to try out DRM-free gaming and at the same time also earn 19% - 25% less from us. Other stores, such as Steam, price their games regionally and have pricing that's more equitable to developers and publishers. So flat pricing + DRM-Free is something many devs and publishers simply refuse. Can you blame them? The best argument we can make to convince a publisher or developer to try DRM-Free gaming is that it earns money. Telling them to sacrifice income while they try selling a game with no copy protection is not a way to make that argument.

Getting back to those 3 new upcoming games coming up. The first one is Age of Wonders 3, which you can pre-order right now on GOG.com. The next 2 ones will be Divine Divinity: Original Sin and The Witcher 3. We’re very excited to offer those games DRM-free worldwide and we hope you’ll love them.

Still, we know some countries are really being screwed with regional pricing (Western Europe, UK, Australia) and as mentioned above, we’ll do our very best, for every release of a new game, to convince our partners to offer something special for the gamers living there.

And don’t forget guys: if regional pricing for those few big (as in, “AA+”) new games is a problem for you, you can always wait. In a few months. The game will be discounted on sale, and at 60, 70, or 80% off, the price difference will be minimal indeed. In a few years it will become a classic in its own right, and then we have the possibility to to make it flat-priced anyway (read next!) The choice is always yours. All we are after is to present it to you 100% DRM-free. We are sure you will make the best choice for yourself, and let others enjoy their own freedom to make choices as well.

So, what is going to happen with classic games then?

Classic content accounts for about 80% of our catalog, so yes, this is a super important topic. We've mentioned here above that we can’t control prices for new games, but we do have a lot of influence when it comes to classic games. GOG.com is the store that made this market visible and viable digitally, and we're the ones who established the prices we charge. We believe that we have a good record to argue for fair pricing with our partners.

So let's talk about the pricing for classics that we're shooting for. For $5.99 classics, we would like to make the games 3.49 GBP, 4.49 EUR, 199 RUB, and $6.49 AUD. For $9.99 classics, our targets are 5.99 GBP, 7.49 EUR, 349 RUB, and $10.99 AUD. This is what we’ve got in mind at the moment. We’ll do our best to make that happen, and we think it will. How? Well, we have made our partners quite happy with GOG.com's sales for years - thanks to you guys :). We have created a global, legal, successful digital distribution market of classics for them. This market didn't exist 5 years ago. By (re)making all those games compatible with modern operating systems for MAC and PC, we've made forgotten games profitable again. When it comes to classic games, we can tell them that we know more about this market than anyone. :) Being retrogaming freaks ourselves, we know that 5.99 EUR or GBP is crazy expensive for a classic game (compared to 5.99 USD). We have always argued that classic games only sell well if they have reasonable prices. Unfair regional pricing equals piracy and that’s the last thing anybody wants.

What’s next?

We will do our very best to make all of the above happen. This means three things:

First, we will work to make our industry go DRM-free in the future for both classic and new games (that’s our mission!).

Second, we will fight hard to have an attractive offer for those AA+ new games for our European, British and Australian users, despite regional pricing that we have to stick to.

Third, we will switch to fair local pricing for classic games, as I mentioned above.

TheEnigmaticT earlier mentioned that he would eat his hat if we ever brought DRM to GOG.com. I'm going to go one step further: by the end of this year, I'm making the promise that we will have converted our classic catalog over to fair regional pricing as outlined above. If not, we'll set up a record a video of some horrible public shaming for me, TheEnigmaticT, and w0rma. In fact, you know what? Feel free to make suggestions below for something appropriate (but also safe enough that we won't get the video banned on YouTube) so you feel that we're motivated to get this done quickly. I'll pick one that's scary enough from the comments below and we'll let you know which one we're sticking to.

I hope that this explanation has helped ease your worry a bit and help you keep your faith in GOG.com as a place that's different, awesome, and that always fights for what's best for gamers. If you have any questions, comments or ideas, feel free to address them to us below and TheEnigmaticT and I will answer them to the best of our abilities tomorrow. We hear you loud and clear, so please do continue sharing your feedback with us. At the end of the day GOG.com is your place; without you guys it would just be a website where a few crazy people from Europe talk about old games. :)

I end many of my emails with this, but there's rarely a time to use it more appropriately than here:

“Best DRM-free wishes,

Guillaume Rambourg,
(TheFrenchMonk)
Managing Director -- GOG.com”
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Gearmos: Since you are from Canada, you will have the same price as US customers. I see your point, but I don't trust you when you say you wouldn't bother if prices rises 50%... unless you are VERY rich.

I think it wold be nice idea for GOG to introduce "personal prices" for people than won´t be affected by "regional prices" but don´t mind to pay that extra. Just kidding (?)
Life is short, why get angry about things? There are far more important things in life that I'd rather spend my time on than being angry about the price of a video game so no I don't get upset about such things. There is an abundance of good deals on games and entertainment online including tonnes of free stuff. There's always something to occupy one's time with, and any time one spends being upset about such things is time spent enjoying life less. If the price of something is higher than I feel like paying for it, I just wait until it comes on sale at a price that I'm ok with or I don't buy it.

I'd like to buy a Logitech G27 racing wheel system for example. Logitech's MSRP for it is $299 which I perceive as being overpriced and I wont pay that for it. Some places like Amazon.com sell it for upwards of $400 or more even which doesn't make me angry, it makes me laugh literally that someone actually would pay that much for it when it's available elsewhere for far cheaper, but if they can sell it for that price and have positive cashflow, all the power to them. I just wont buy it there and it makes me take caution on any of their prices and do my research before buying something there in the future. I've seen this driving wheel come on sale for $199 twice now and missed out on it (found out after the fact), and one store advertised it as being on sale at that price for 2 weeks then changed the price to $249 a week later before the end of the advertised sale. I was displeased to miss out on the sale but not upset with them because life is full of unexpected things like that and I'm in no hurry. I'll wait and eventually someone somewhere will offer the Logitech G27 for less than $200 and I'll buy it. If not, I just wont buy it and my money will buy other things instead, no biggie.
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Djaron: anyway it's a no win situation for us !
whatever we do on our side regarding regional pricing that gog forced in, in the end it will always prooove the publishers were right against gog

explanation:

1) we boycott titles brought in the catalog with regional pricing: (and to some extent, even boycott it when on sale afterwards just like the angry nerds we are :))

Publishers to gog: "see ? there was no opportunity for us at all to enter your catalog, as there were marginal sales to expect, plus it weights a heavy risk on us with your DRM free policy..."

2) we purchase it but through deviant ways (vpn, gifting, etc)

Publishers to gog: "see ? there is no market outside us ? you believe us fools ? it is just your customer base is not as honnest and fair as you claimed, PLUs it will cost YOU money to deploy the technical assets to ENFORCE respect of regional price and TRACK DOWN offenders !"

3) we purchase the full price or through deviant ways AND spread the drm free copy on torrents in rage !

Publishers to gog: "See ? Your DRM-free is just an open door to rampaging piracy ! We sue YOU and also will revoke the previous licences to sell even our old games we wouldnt be able to maitain ourselves on the market"

4) we purchase the games no matter the price like cattle

Publishers to gog: "See ? People will buy our stuff no matter the price... They dont mind paying higher prices... and we even could charge them higher price for the niche feature of drm free thing... Please bend over a little lower and spread your butt wider so we can keep thrusting in a little more, pals !"

or a mix of those 4... so no matter what we do, WE loose, gaming loose on a global scale
I hope it will be more like this:
5) people from US, Canada and other regions with "fair" price buy the game if they can afford.
people from Europe (including UK), Australia and other regions with "unfair" price don't buy the game or buy a few copies. When the game is on sale the number of copies sold increases.

Publisher to GOG: you were right, DRM-free and putting our game on GOG were good ideeas. Unfortunatelly, we think that regional pricing was a mistake. For our next game we'll make the prices more fair (flat price or price + local tax, but not more than that).
Post edited March 04, 2014 by GabiMoro
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Maighstir: Touchy, are we?

:-P
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Zoidberg: You're comment isnot logical, sir! Touchy in english has nothing to do with what "touché" means in the curent conntext.

;)
Au contraire, mon frère belge, my comment is most logical, though uttered in jest and solely due to its visual similarity; you seem touchy about how the word is spelled. I'm not completely ignorant of the French language, having studied it for four-and-a-half years (and subsequently forgotten most of what I learned).
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Gearmos: Since you are from Canada, you will have the same price as US customers. I see your point, but I don't trust you when you say you wouldn't bother if prices rises 50%... unless you are VERY rich.

I think it wold be nice idea for GOG to introduce "personal prices" for people than won´t be affected by "regional prices" but don´t mind to pay that extra. Just kidding (?)
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skeletonbow: Life is short, why get angry about things? There are far more important things in life that I'd rather spend my time on than being angry about the price of a video game so no I don't get upset about such things. There is an abundance of good deals on games and entertainment online including tonnes of free stuff. There's always something to occupy one's time with, and any time one spends being upset about such things is time spent enjoying life less. If the price of something is higher than I feel like paying for it, I just wait until it comes on sale at a price that I'm ok with or I don't buy it.

I'd like to buy a Logitech G27 racing wheel system for example. Logitech's MSRP for it is $299 which I perceive as being overpriced and I wont pay that for it. Some places like Amazon.com sell it for upwards of $400 or more even which doesn't make me angry, it makes me laugh literally that someone actually would pay that much for it when it's available elsewhere for far cheaper, but if they can sell it for that price and have positive cashflow, all the power to them. I just wont buy it there and it makes me take caution on any of their prices and do my research before buying something there in the future. I've seen this driving wheel come on sale for $199 twice now and missed out on it (found out after the fact), and one store advertised it as being on sale at that price for 2 weeks then changed the price to $249 a week later before the end of the advertised sale. I was displeased to miss out on the sale but not upset with them because life is full of unexpected things like that and I'm in no hurry. I'll wait and eventually someone somewhere will offer the Logitech G27 for less than $200 and I'll buy it. If not, I just wont buy it and my money will buy other things instead, no biggie.
Then I assume if GOG introduces DRM system in games it won´t bother you, since "life is short" and you will "buy other things instead."

But you are right in one thing, this is a law of supply and demand... But we still have the right of defending our consumers rights and the liberty of expressing and publishing our opinions. Just like you are doing already. ;-)

And please don't compare overprice for non-U.S. customers with an offer you missed out. It's not the same thing.
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Zoidberg: You're comment isnot logical, sir! Touchy in english has nothing to do with what "touché" means in the curent conntext.

;)
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Maighstir: Au contraire, mon frère belge, my comment is most logical, though uttered in jest and solely due to its visual similarity; you seem touchy about how the word is spelled. I'm not completely ignorant of the French language, having studied it for four-and-a-half years (and subsequently forgotten most of what I learned).
To be fair, I'm not touchy, I do that for french wors, I'd do that for any other language, it is barely a matter of principles. I prefer "original" voicing in movies, that means english for movies filmed/created in english, japanese for japanese and french for french. It's all the same thing really.

"Touché" is spelled like that be it in english, french or japanese. "Weekend" is spelled like that, used in a french sentence or not (hopefully it's the correct spelling AND use :P).
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Gearmos: Since you are from Canada, you will have the same price as US customers. I see your point, but I don't trust you when you say you wouldn't bother if prices rises 50%... unless you are VERY rich.

I think it wold be nice idea for GOG to introduce "personal prices" for people than won´t be affected by "regional prices" but don´t mind to pay that extra. Just kidding (?)
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skeletonbow: Life is short, why get angry about things? ...
It is a matter of principles here too.

If gog was "just another online shop", it would be dead already...
Post edited March 04, 2014 by Zoidberg
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skeletonbow: Life is short, why get angry about things? There are far more important things in life that I'd rather spend my time on than being angry about the price of a video game so no I don't get upset about such things. There is an abundance of good deals on games and entertainment online including tonnes of free stuff. There's always something to occupy one's time with, and any time one spends being upset about such things is time spent enjoying life less. If the price of something is higher than I feel like paying for it, I just wait until it comes on sale at a price that I'm ok with or I don't buy it.

I'd like to buy a Logitech G27 racing wheel system for example. Logitech's MSRP for it is $299 which I perceive as being overpriced and I wont pay that for it. Some places like Amazon.com sell it for upwards of $400 or more even which doesn't make me angry, it makes me laugh literally that someone actually would pay that much for it when it's available elsewhere for far cheaper, but if they can sell it for that price and have positive cashflow, all the power to them. I just wont buy it there and it makes me take caution on any of their prices and do my research before buying something there in the future. I've seen this driving wheel come on sale for $199 twice now and missed out on it (found out after the fact), and one store advertised it as being on sale at that price for 2 weeks then changed the price to $249 a week later before the end of the advertised sale. I was displeased to miss out on the sale but not upset with them because life is full of unexpected things like that and I'm in no hurry. I'll wait and eventually someone somewhere will offer the Logitech G27 for less than $200 and I'll buy it. If not, I just wont buy it and my money will buy other things instead, no biggie.
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Gearmos: Then I assume if GOG introduces DRM system in games it won´t bother you, since "life is short" and you will "buy other things instead."

But you are right in one thing, this is a law of supply and demand... But we still have the right of defending our consumers rights and the liberty of expressing and publishing our opinions. Just like you are doing already. ;-)

And please don't compare overprice for non-U.S. customers with an offer you missed out. It's not the same thing.
The guts of the two scenarios look pretty similar, though. Both you and they have a price point on the respective items which is favorable. If it isn't (no sale, shitty regional pricing, whatever) you won't make the purchase. In both cases it seems like a matter of what you're willing to spend. They aren't willing to pay MSRP, neither are you.
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skeletonbow: Life is short, why get angry about things? There are far more important things in life that I'd rather spend my time on than being angry about the price of a video game so no I don't get upset about such things. There is an abundance of good deals on games and entertainment online including tonnes of free stuff. There's always something to occupy one's time with, and any time one spends being upset about such things is time spent enjoying life less. If the price of something is higher than I feel like paying for it, I just wait until it comes on sale at a price that I'm ok with or I don't buy it.

I'd like to buy a Logitech G27 racing wheel system for example. Logitech's MSRP for it is $299 which I perceive as being overpriced and I wont pay that for it. Some places like Amazon.com sell it for upwards of $400 or more even which doesn't make me angry, it makes me laugh literally that someone actually would pay that much for it when it's available elsewhere for far cheaper, but if they can sell it for that price and have positive cashflow, all the power to them. I just wont buy it there and it makes me take caution on any of their prices and do my research before buying something there in the future. I've seen this driving wheel come on sale for $199 twice now and missed out on it (found out after the fact), and one store advertised it as being on sale at that price for 2 weeks then changed the price to $249 a week later before the end of the advertised sale. I was displeased to miss out on the sale but not upset with them because life is full of unexpected things like that and I'm in no hurry. I'll wait and eventually someone somewhere will offer the Logitech G27 for less than $200 and I'll buy it. If not, I just wont buy it and my money will buy other things instead, no biggie.
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Gearmos: Then I assume if GOG introduces DRM system in games it won´t bother you, since "life is short" and you will "buy other things instead."

But you are right in one thing, this is a law of supply and demand... But we still have the right of defending our consumers rights and the liberty of expressing and publishing our opinions. Just like you are doing already. ;-)

And please don't compare overprice for non-U.S. customers with an offer you missed out. It's not the same thing.
Why would it matter to anyone else what bothers me or not? There's a difference between disliking something a company does and being in an anger filled hateful rage towards the company. If you'd like me to speculate on the hypothetical you proposed though, then I'll say that if GOG were to later add DRM-enabled titles to the catalogue it would be to my extreme surprise as I consider that a business ending proposition for them should it ever happen. Would I be disappointed to see such a thing happen? Absolutely. Would I be angry about it? No. Would I be angry at GOG? No. Would I continue to shop at GOG? That depends on the specific circumstances at the time, but I would probably continue to buy DRM-free games in the catalogue that had prices that were to my liking however I would not buy games with DRM here. That being said, as a hypothetical situation I doubt it will ever materials in reality to have to make such a decision.

I wasn't comparing an offer I missed out on something with the situation you describe. I was illustrating how I personally react to the pricing of something not matching my personal expectations by simply not making a purchase. Either the final price tag on something is a price that is reasonable to me for the value I get and I'll purchase it, or it isn't and I wont. That's true for me whether something is regular price, sale price, fixed global price or regional price, or the price of buying it off the back of a truck in an alleyway. ;o) Anger and resentment aren't automatic emotions every human being feels when a company offers them something in less than the ideal manner they'd like to see. What surprises me, is that some people seem to think that if a company changes something unexpectedly that every person that shops there should all of a sudden become outraged and launch World War 7 at them. That's not me, I just don't think that way so I don't experience that kind of rage like some people do. Life is short and I favour peace of mind over allowing giving control of my emotional state to 3rd parties be they game distributors or otherwise. This doesn't mean that I'm "ok" with everything a company does, it means that I can dislike something or disagree with someone or something that's happened without being in a rage about it, a very different concept.
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CarrionCrow: The guts of the two scenarios look pretty similar, though. Both you and they have a price point on the respective items which is favorable. If it isn't (no sale, shitty regional pricing, whatever) you won't make the purchase. In both cases it seems like a matter of what you're willing to spend. They aren't willing to pay MSRP, neither are you.
My thrifty masterplan on the Logitech G27 since it isn't an absolute necessity nor something I've got to have yesterday... is to wait until it goes on sale at some Canadian retailer again for $199 or less and do a pricematch on it at memoryexpress.com, knocking another $25 off the price and getting it for $175 or less. Booyah! ;oP The cool thing is that the retailers have no choice in the matter about it and I totally control the situation because I know it will go on sale somewhere at some point and I'm simultaneously perfectly ok with never owning it ever if it comes down to that. So I win this one either way. They only win if they present me with a situation that makes my wallet open and bleed money. Hehehe. ;)

In a sense, the same thing is true with the price of videogames on GOG.com or elsewhere for me too. It hits my price point in $ or it doesn't and I don't buy it. How or why the price is a particular number at a given time doesn't matter as much to me as the actual dollar price shown. I value certain principles also, but at the end of the day I survey the options in front of me and choose the best price/options I have available at the time. Sometimes that is GOG.com and other times it is Steam keys on one of the various Steam reseller sites (GMG, GG, Amazon etc.) or bundle sites. Whatever floats my boat at the particular moment. ;o)
Post edited March 04, 2014 by skeletonbow
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Maighstir: Au contraire, mon frère belge, my comment is most logical, though uttered in jest and solely due to its visual similarity; you seem touchy about how the word is spelled. I'm not completely ignorant of the French language, having studied it for four-and-a-half years (and subsequently forgotten most of what I learned).
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Zoidberg: To be fair, I'm not touchy, I do that for french wors, I'd do that for any other language, it is barely a matter of principles. I prefer "original" voicing in movies, that means english for movies filmed/created in english, japanese for japanese and french for french. It's all the same thing really.

"Touché" is spelled like that be it in english, french or japanese. "Weekend" is spelled like that, used in a french sentence or not (hopefully it's the correct spelling AND use :P).
I agree with you, and I do the same. The comment was, as said, really just meant as a joke on the similarity of the words and how the English word fit in the context. I do hope you did not take offence despite my utterances of French, Belgium, and "touchy".

(Also, to be similarly touchy, languages use initial capital letters in typed or written English.)

:-)
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Gearmos: Then I assume if GOG introduces DRM system in games it won´t bother you, since "life is short" and you will "buy other things instead."

But you are right in one thing, this is a law of supply and demand... But we still have the right of defending our consumers rights and the liberty of expressing and publishing our opinions. Just like you are doing already. ;-)

And please don't compare overprice for non-U.S. customers with an offer you missed out. It's not the same thing.
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skeletonbow: Why would it matter to anyone else what bothers me or not? There's a difference between disliking something a company does and being in an anger filled hateful rage towards the company. If you'd like me to speculate on the hypothetical you proposed though, then I'll say that if GOG were to later add DRM-enabled titles to the catalogue it would be to my extreme surprise as I consider that a business ending proposition for them should it ever happen. Would I be disappointed to see such a thing happen? Absolutely. Would I be angry about it? No. Would I be angry at GOG? No. Would I continue to shop at GOG? That depends on the specific circumstances at the time, but I would probably continue to buy DRM-free games in the catalogue that had prices that were to my liking however I would not buy games with DRM here. That being said, as a hypothetical situation I doubt it will ever materials in reality to have to make such a decision.

I wasn't comparing an offer I missed out on something with the situation you describe. I was illustrating how I personally react to the pricing of something not matching my personal expectations by simply not making a purchase. Either the final price tag on something is a price that is reasonable to me for the value I get and I'll purchase it, or it isn't and I wont. That's true for me whether something is regular price, sale price, fixed global price or regional price, or the price of buying it off the back of a truck in an alleyway. ;o) Anger and resentment aren't automatic emotions every human being feels when a company offers them something in less than the ideal manner they'd like to see. What surprises me, is that some people seem to think that if a company changes something unexpectedly that every person that shops there should all of a sudden become outraged and launch World War 7 at them. That's not me, I just don't think that way so I don't experience that kind of rage like some people do. Life is short and I favour peace of mind over allowing giving control of my emotional state to 3rd parties be they game distributors or otherwise. This doesn't mean that I'm "ok" with everything a company does, it means that I can dislike something or disagree with someone or something that's happened without being in a rage about it, a very different concept.
It bothers me that you're not bothered. Be bothered already! Be bothered, damn it! 300 dollars for a steering wheel? Fuck Logitech! Say it with me now! Get BOTHERED! Violently, exceedingly bothered! Preferably in CAPS so more people know how BOTHERED you are! If you're not BOTHERED, then my being BOTHERED starts looking slightly SILLY by COMPARISON!

Also, as I post this, it kinda bothers me that I haven't learned how to edit quotes out of a reply. Unfortunately though, I can't be bothered to learn it. On the verge of a full-on bother-related dilemma here.
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Zoidberg: To be fair, I'm not touchy, I do that for french wors, I'd do that for any other language, it is barely a matter of principles. I prefer "original" voicing in movies, that means english for movies filmed/created in english, japanese for japanese and french for french. It's all the same thing really.

"Touché" is spelled like that be it in english, french or japanese. "Weekend" is spelled like that, used in a french sentence or not (hopefully it's the correct spelling AND use :P).
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Maighstir: I agree with you, and I do the same. The comment was, as said, really just meant as a joke on the similarity of the words and how the English word fit in the context. I do hope you did not take offence despite my utterances of French, Belgium, and "touchy".

(Also, to be similarly touchy, languages use initial capital letters in typed or written English.)

:-)
No worries, I knew it was in jest and you're right about the capital letters of languages ;)
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Gearmos: Then I assume if GOG introduces DRM system in games it won´t bother you, since "life is short" and you will "buy other things instead."

But you are right in one thing, this is a law of supply and demand... But we still have the right of defending our consumers rights and the liberty of expressing and publishing our opinions. Just like you are doing already. ;-)

And please don't compare overprice for non-U.S. customers with an offer you missed out. It's not the same thing.
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skeletonbow: Why would it matter to anyone else what bothers me or not? There's a difference between disliking something a company does and being in an anger filled hateful rage towards the company. If you'd like me to speculate on the hypothetical you proposed though, then I'll say that if GOG were to later add DRM-enabled titles to the catalogue it would be to my extreme surprise as I consider that a business ending proposition for them should it ever happen. Would I be disappointed to see such a thing happen? Absolutely. Would I be angry about it? No. Would I be angry at GOG? No. Would I continue to shop at GOG? That depends on the specific circumstances at the time, but I would probably continue to buy DRM-free games in the catalogue that had prices that were to my liking however I would not buy games with DRM here. That being said, as a hypothetical situation I doubt it will ever materials in reality to have to make such a decision.

I wasn't comparing an offer I missed out on something with the situation you describe. I was illustrating how I personally react to the pricing of something not matching my personal expectations by simply not making a purchase. Either the final price tag on something is a price that is reasonable to me for the value I get and I'll purchase it, or it isn't and I wont. That's true for me whether something is regular price, sale price, fixed global price or regional price, or the price of buying it off the back of a truck in an alleyway. ;o) Anger and resentment aren't automatic emotions every human being feels when a company offers them something in less than the ideal manner they'd like to see. What surprises me, is that some people seem to think that if a company changes something unexpectedly that every person that shops there should all of a sudden become outraged and launch World War 7 at them. That's not me, I just don't think that way so I don't experience that kind of rage like some people do. Life is short and I favour peace of mind over allowing giving control of my emotional state to 3rd parties be they game distributors or otherwise. This doesn't mean that I'm "ok" with everything a company does, it means that I can dislike something or disagree with someone or something that's happened without being in a rage about it, a very different concept.
You said "Why would it matter to anyone else what bothers me or not?" Let me ask you then: Why would it matter to you if we are angry or not? XD But I'm not angry, friend. Maybe decieved by GOG, but not angry at all.
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CarrionCrow: It bothers me that you're not bothered. Be bothered already! Be bothered, damn it! 300 dollars for a steering wheel? Fuck Logitech! Say it with me now! Get BOTHERED! Violently, exceedingly bothered! Preferably in CAPS so more people know how BOTHERED you are! If you're not BOTHERED, then my being BOTHERED starts looking slightly SILLY by COMPARISON!

Also, as I post this, it kinda bothers me that I haven't learned how to edit quotes out of a reply. Unfortunately though, I can't be bothered to learn it. On the verge of a full-on bother-related dilemma here.
Oh I'm disappointed about it in a small way, but nothing material. :) $300 is for the wheel, gear shifter and pedal system which is a better deal than for a wheel alone per se., but does seem steep to me. Mind you I'm kind of casual at the idea of racing/driving at the moment. I believe I'll enjoy it but dunno if I'll become addicted or whatnot. I bought a crapload of flight gear a few years back (Saitek X52 Pro flightstick+throttle, Saitek rudders, Naturalpoint Track IR 4 Pro) for a small fortune and am rather enthusiastic about that stuff but haven't actually used it very much. So that's why I'm kind of indifferent, it's at least somewhat of a whimsical purchase desire. ;)

Perhaps your outrage will cause the price of the G27 wheel to go down for me! ;oP
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CarrionCrow: It bothers me that you're not bothered. Be bothered already! Be bothered, damn it! 300 dollars for a steering wheel? Fuck Logitech! Say it with me now! Get BOTHERED! Violently, exceedingly bothered! Preferably in CAPS so more people know how BOTHERED you are! If you're not BOTHERED, then my being BOTHERED starts looking slightly SILLY by COMPARISON!

Also, as I post this, it kinda bothers me that I haven't learned how to edit quotes out of a reply. Unfortunately though, I can't be bothered to learn it. On the verge of a full-on bother-related dilemma here.
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skeletonbow: Oh I'm disappointed about it in a small way, but nothing material. :) $300 is for the wheel, gear shifter and pedal system which is a better deal than for a wheel alone per se., but does seem steep to me. Mind you I'm kind of casual at the idea of racing/driving at the moment. I believe I'll enjoy it but dunno if I'll become addicted or whatnot. I bought a crapload of flight gear a few years back (Saitek X52 Pro flightstick+throttle, Saitek rudders, Naturalpoint Track IR 4 Pro) for a small fortune and am rather enthusiastic about that stuff but haven't actually used it very much. So that's why I'm kind of indifferent, it's at least somewhat of a whimsical purchase desire. ;)

Perhaps your outrage will cause the price of the G27 wheel to go down for me! ;oP
It'll bother the hell out of me if it doesn't.
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Hey guys there is another game on GOG to be added on rip-off pricing list. Tales of the Monkey island now cost 34.99$.
It seems the effect of regional pricing is already here.
Post edited March 04, 2014 by Matruchus
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Matruchus: Hey guys there is another game on GOG to be added on rip-off pricing list. Tales of the Monkey island now cost 34.99$.
It seems the effect of regional pricing is already here.
Wat?

It was always that price here.