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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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StormHammer: Yes. Haven't heard anything back, yet.
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cmdr_flashheart: Most likely, they're working on it.

http://cboye.files.wordpress.com/2011/01/hang-in-there.jpeg
Okay, I got an automated acknowledgement email this time, but not last time. Maybe something went awry last time. *shrugs*
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CarrionCrow: ...Edit - Assassin's Creed on a Uplay server would be 3 different kinds of DRM, I think. First Steam, then Uplay, then having to be logged into a server the whole time you're playing.
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Trilarion: Good thing I grabbed it on retail DRM free without any of these things (as attachment on a games magazine) for a really good price even better than here.
Well retail always has better prices. Especially after 1 year. Just go to any store that sells games in Germany and you will get them between 10-20€ after one year. A bit later it goes under 10€ in retail.
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JMich: ...You can buy games without supporting regional pricing, by buying the ones you are interested and don't use regional pricing. ...
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Trilarion: Hmm, I wonder how this would work if the games I'm interested in are only available with regional pricing. For me it looks binary as hedwards said. Either I buy them and support regional pricing which I don't want or I don't buy them and do not support regional pricing but don't get the games either.

As hedwards said: essentially no middleground. If you're not against it, you're for it.
For games only available with regional pricing, it's no different than steam (or origin, or PS) only games. If you are ok with the price (monetary or otherwise), buy them. If not, don't. And I seriously doubt you won't have an interest in a non-regional priced game. Would you buy those or not?
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Senteria: I'm getting a bit tired of all the bashing on GOG by users. .

"GOG introduces a regional price for a game! boohoo, now I'm going to go back to steam".
They leave and support the biggest PRO regional prices service in the world. Well that's just hypocritical.

It's just silly. At least you get compensated a bit because GOG doesn't want you to be ripped off as hard as your favourite steam store does. But no that's not good enough. GOG also gives you bonus goodies but apparantly they don't care. I really loathed the regional pricing and I still do but I understand, respect and came to terms with it.

How loyal are you when something doesn't go your way, you just crawl back to Steam. Even more stupid are the people who are not affected because of said game and will benefit from regional pricing in the future.
Steam's Catalogue > GOG's

Steam's community feature > GOG's

Steamworks (Cloud Saving etc) > GOG

Steam games discount by bundles > GOG

It's just the DRM component, unfair pricing and region lock that irk DRM-free lover. That's why GOG shines. Without one of the best component - fair pricing - GOG loses some of its appeal.
Post edited March 07, 2014 by zeroxxx
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Narushima: I wish GOG would stop trying to reason with angry teenagers who have no experience of life and compromise.
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Trilarion: I wish everybody who makes a slightly veiled insulting remark would see how pathethic it really is.
How was that even slightly veiled? Do I have to be even more blunt?!

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hedwards: Granted there's been mud slinging on both sides, but it's kind of interesting how it's mostly the people defending GOG that are engaging in it.
I'm not defending GOG, they're big enough to do it themselves. No, I'm just annoyed by whiny bitches.
I'm not even interested by the debate; I haven't read more than ten posts here, if that.

Downrate, please.
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CarrionCrow: Yes, I am on GOG's side. But on my terms. I don't want them to go out of business. But I won't spend money on items with bad prices. It seems like you're only wanting to look at the situation in us versus them terms, but it's not that simple. It's not just silent complacency or torches and pitchforks. And I've gotta say, the "what if they add DRM" thing has already been covered, at exhausting length. They've said it themselves, if they add DRM their business will essentially be over. Without that differentiating factor, they truly would be nothing more than a small-scale Steam clone and would be annihilated as such. Honestly, I can think of a lot of things that I could be doing to help enable dysfunctional game business practices. I could be getting Command and Conquer that isn't even compatible with modern OS's on Origin from a box I paid for at Walmart that only had a code for game downloads. I could be playing Assassin's Creed on a Uplay server, that I purchased from Steam since I didn't care about having not one but two different piles of DRM bullshit in my lap. Also, if classic items are going to be set to be equivalent to dollar purchases, only in different currency forms, how can that be seen as a support of regional pricing, which is all about sticking it to every region possible for extra money? If the prices are equivalent, that doesn't make sense.

Edit - Assassin's Creed on a Uplay server would be 3 different kinds of DRM, I think. First Steam, then Uplay, then having to be logged into a server the whole time you're playing.
Ultimately, purchasing decisions are binary, either you buy or you don't buy. If you buy, then you're sending them the message that you're OK with the way things are being done.

This isn't like donating to charity where you have not just the choice of whether to donate or not, but also the choice as to how much you like to donate. In this case it pretty much is take it or leave it.

It's not a matter of how I want to view the situation, it's a matter of how the situation is. Buying now conveys the notion that you don't really care about regional pricing or how GOG behaves. You might not like that, but that's exactly what it says about people that continue to shop here.
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Senteria: I'm getting a bit tired of all the bashing on GOG by users. .

"GOG introduces a regional price for a game! boohoo, now I'm going to go back to steam".
They leave and support the biggest PRO regional prices service in the world. Well that's just hypocritical.

It's just silly. At least you get compensated a bit because GOG doesn't want you to be ripped off as hard as your favourite steam store does. But no that's not good enough. GOG also gives you bonus goodies but apparantly they don't care. I really loathed the regional pricing and I still do but I understand, respect and came to terms with it.

How loyal are you when something doesn't go your way, you just crawl back to Steam. Even more stupid are the people who are not affected because of said game and will benefit from regional pricing in the future.
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zeroxxx: Steam's Catalogue > GOG's

In number only

Steam's community feature > GOG's

GOGs forums are lightyears better

Steamworks (Cloud Saving etc) > GOG

Lot of people dont give a XXXX about "cloud" crap

Steam games discount by bundles > GOG

Not sure what u mean here --- Gog *does* sell discounted bundles during some sales

It's just the DRM component, unfair pricing and region lock that irk DRM-free lover. That's why GOG shines. Without one of the best component - fair pricing - GOG loses some of its appeal.
See above
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hedwards: Yes, but as I detailed in the post you ninja'd, the fact remains that it's purely an intellectual exercise whether or not theirs a middle ground here because anything other than boycotting is going to be interpreted as tacit support for the system.

You can gussy it up with whatever logical trappings you like, but ultimately, anybody who buys from GOG after this change is ultimately on their side. GOG doesn't know why people buy games, but they do know if people are buying them. Telling the difference between somebody that just loves the game versus somebody who loves DRM free is nigh impossible to do. But, determining that people bought the game is something that's easy for them to know.
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JMich: So if I buy games with fair pricing but don't buy games with regional price, I'm supporting regional pricing? If I buy classic games but not indie games, do I support indie games?
You can buy games without supporting regional pricing, by buying the ones you are interested and don't use regional pricing. By boycotting everything you are more or less saying that nothing is worth your money.

For clarification, by regional pricing I mean something like The Witcher 2 (aka the price paid is different depending on where you are) while by fair pricing I mean the proposed change for the classics, where $1=€0.75, so the games will cost €4.49 or €5.99 for a $5.99 or $9.99 respectively.
All the prices here are now regional prices. Now there are some where it's 1 dollar is one euro and ones where the gap is a bit closer, but ultimately, they've already said that all the games here are going regional in their pricing.

You seem to want their to be middle ground, but the middle ground here is pretty minimal. And since they've already announced that the regional pricing is going to apply to everything, i"m not sure how one buys here without supporting that aspect of their pricing model.
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zeroxxx: Steam's Catalogue > GOG's

In number only

Steam's community feature > GOG's

GOGs forums are lightyears better

Steamworks (Cloud Saving etc) > GOG

Lot of people dont give a XXXX about "cloud" crap

Steam games discount by bundles > GOG

Not sure what u mean here --- Gog *does* sell discounted bundles during some sales

It's just the DRM component, unfair pricing and region lock that irk DRM-free lover. That's why GOG shines. Without one of the best component - fair pricing - GOG loses some of its appeal.
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Niggles: See above
People keep saying that, but do we have any actual evidence that it's true? I mean seriously, I haven't seen a lot of people here saying that they're going back to Steam.

I'm personally going to be buying from Dotemu, Shinyloot and the other DRM free shops or not at all. GOG didn't need to be so insulting in its handling of this, that's something that they did on their own of their own volition, they can't blame teh ebul publishers for that, that's something they did themselves.
Post edited March 07, 2014 by hedwards
high rated
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Narushima: I'm not defending GOG, they're big enough to do it themselves. No, I'm just annoyed by whiny bitches.
I'm not even interested by the debate; I haven't read more than ten posts here, if that.

Downrate, please.
If you are not interrested in the debate and didn't read more than ten posts, why are you whining here?
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hedwards: All the prices here are now regional prices. Now there are some where it's 1 dollar is one euro and ones where the gap is a bit closer, but ultimately, they've already said that all the games here are going regional in their pricing.
As I said above, when I mention regional pricing, I mean that $39.99 is €39.99, when I say fair price I mean $5.99 is €4.49. Math so far shows me that if GOG used fair pricing, I would have paid a couple of hundreds less than what I've already paid. So yes, I do support fair pricing.
As for regional pricing, it's the same as it was with The Witcher 2. I didn't spend €39.99 for it, but I did grab it for $19.99.

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hedwards: You seem to want their to be middle ground, but the middle ground here is pretty minimal. And since they've already announced that the regional pricing is going to apply to everything, i"m not sure how one buys here without supporting that aspect of their pricing model.
I assume by their you mean there. And I don't want there to be middle ground, there is middle ground.
As above.
1) Leave GOG. Extreme position 1
2) Use Russian IP to buy everything, even if you don't care about it. Extreme position 2
3) If the price (discounted or not, regional or not) is fair for what GOG's offering, buy the game. If it's not (few extras, no linux version, overpriced), don't buy it. Same as it was from 2008.

3 is the middle ground, and it is here. It's equivalent to buying the Humble Bundles that are offering cross platform, DRM-Free games, but ignoring the ones that are only offering Steam keys. And it does send the message that Steam only bundles are bad, while also sending the message that cross platform, DRM-Free bundles are good.
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CarrionCrow: Yes, I am on GOG's side. But on my terms. I don't want them to go out of business. But I won't spend money on items with bad prices. It seems like you're only wanting to look at the situation in us versus them terms, but it's not that simple. It's not just silent complacency or torches and pitchforks. And I've gotta say, the "what if they add DRM" thing has already been covered, at exhausting length. They've said it themselves, if they add DRM their business will essentially be over. Without that differentiating factor, they truly would be nothing more than a small-scale Steam clone and would be annihilated as such. Honestly, I can think of a lot of things that I could be doing to help enable dysfunctional game business practices. I could be getting Command and Conquer that isn't even compatible with modern OS's on Origin from a box I paid for at Walmart that only had a code for game downloads. I could be playing Assassin's Creed on a Uplay server, that I purchased from Steam since I didn't care about having not one but two different piles of DRM bullshit in my lap. Also, if classic items are going to be set to be equivalent to dollar purchases, only in different currency forms, how can that be seen as a support of regional pricing, which is all about sticking it to every region possible for extra money? If the prices are equivalent, that doesn't make sense.

Edit - Assassin's Creed on a Uplay server would be 3 different kinds of DRM, I think. First Steam, then Uplay, then having to be logged into a server the whole time you're playing.
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hedwards: Ultimately, purchasing decisions are binary, either you buy or you don't buy. If you buy, then you're sending them the message that you're OK with the way things are being done.

This isn't like donating to charity where you have not just the choice of whether to donate or not, but also the choice as to how much you like to donate. In this case it pretty much is take it or leave it.

It's not a matter of how I want to view the situation, it's a matter of how the situation is. Buying now conveys the notion that you don't really care about regional pricing or how GOG behaves. You might not like that, but that's exactly what it says about people that continue to shop here.
There's buying, there's not buying, there are choices in buying, and then there's what people choose to buy and why they choose to buy it. What makes the difference between success and failure, even across very similar products. You can buy a game, or not buy it, but companies will definitely look at what people are preferring to buy from and alter their approaches accordingly. The numbers tell the story, and everyone in the game of selling things wants bigger and bigger numbers. It's like Guillaume said in the info, GOG can get away with having a better price for the classics because they have shown that there's a market (BIG numbers) for things that a lot of companies thought were used up. People chose, and that was the result. People are choosing right now, purchasing classics or indies with straight pricing versus dropping heavy cash on items that are overpriced based on region. People choosing those classics is what's making GOG feel as though they'll be able to have the prices stay the same. It's increased their negotiating power. As previously stated, I don't think there's a chance in hell that a company will look at a hundred thousand sales of fairly region priced items versus a thousand sales of unfairly region priced items and not consider that they may have done the wrong thing, something they need to rectify in the future.
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hedwards: People keep saying that, but do we have any actual evidence that it's true? I mean seriously, I haven't seen a lot of people here saying that they're going back to Steam.

I'm personally going to be buying from Dotemu, Shinyloot and the other DRM free shops or not at all. GOG didn't need to be so insulting in its handling of this, that's something that they did on their own of their own volition, they can't blame teh ebul publishers for that, that's something they did themselves.
A few people spat the dummy and said they will never buy from GOG again.
And you? I dont understand how ur so offended, your actually in the US and not russia if i remember correctly?.Its not going to affect you as much as it does the rest of us.

AND i don't feel GOG has been insulting at all. Sure it sounds like an attempt at positive PR spin (anyone can see that), but also (not an excuse but) remember they have a small history of saying things not in the way they were intended to come across as well - that was my initial reaction with the way they worded things.
What did you expect them to say? " Oh by the way, the terrible news for customers is.....". Companies are not going to deliberately give you bad news directly bluntly unless they can avoid it imho
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hedwards: People keep saying that, but do we have any actual evidence that it's true? I mean seriously, I haven't seen a lot of people here saying that they're going back to Steam.

I'm personally going to be buying from Dotemu, Shinyloot and the other DRM free shops or not at all. GOG didn't need to be so insulting in its handling of this, that's something that they did on their own of their own volition, they can't blame teh ebul publishers for that, that's something they did themselves.
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Niggles: A few people spat the dummy and said they will never buy from GOG again.
And you? I dont understand how ur so offended, your actually in the US and not russia if i remember correctly?.Its not going to affect you as much as it does the rest of us.

AND i don't feel GOG has been insulting at all. Sure it sounds like an attempt at positive PR spin (anyone can see that), but also (not an excuse but) remember they have a small history of saying things not in the way they were intended to come across as well - that was my initial reaction with the way they worded things.
What did you expect them to say? " Oh by the way, the terrible news for customers is.....". Companies are not going to deliberately give you bad news directly bluntly unless they can avoid it imho
They won't do it if they don't want to be seen as passive-aggressively (at best) spitting in the collective eye of every bigger company they want to do business with. One thing that I think threw people a lot was the opening of the statement with "Good news!" What they meant of course was "Good news! We'll be able to bring more games here without DRM! We might actually be able to get some of the knee-jerk reaction groups that think DRM-free equals rampant piracy to do business with us!" But they can't say that "Good news! We're compromising with them and loosening one of our positions in order to get them to do the same!" Doesn't exactly roll off the tongue right there. And most of all, they couldn't say, "Good news! We might be able to get some companies to stop being deluded pussies who harbor fantasies that their games haven't been pirated to hell and back by everyone with two brain cells, a net connection and the preexisting willingness to steal from them for a bit and come do business with us instead!"
Post edited March 07, 2014 by CarrionCrow
Do send out a mail when you've come to your senses again GOG, so that we know to come back and spend money here again.
high rated
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CarrionCrow: They won't do it if they don't want to be seen as passive-aggressively (at best) spitting in the collective eye of every bigger company they want to do business with. One thing that I think threw people a lot was the opening of the statement with "Good news!" What they meant of course was "Good news! We'll be able to bring more games here without DRM! We might actually be able to get some of the knee-jerk reaction groups that think DRM-free equals rampant piracy to do business with us!" But they can't say that "Good news! We're compromising with them and loosening one of our positions in order to get them to do the same!" Doesn't exactly roll off the tongue right there. And most of all, they couldn't say, "Good news! We might be able to get some companies to stop being deluded pussies who harbor fantasies that their games haven't been pirated to hell and back by everyone with two brain cells, a net connection and the preexisting willingness to steal from them for a bit and come do business with us instead!"
What they could have said however was:
"We have news. Some of you are probably going to feel a bit mixed about this, but we've managed to engineer a situation where we can bring more, newer, AA+ games to GOG. Unfortunately this does also mean adopting a new regional pricing model - we had to make some compromises to entice a few parties sorry guys! Don't worry though, we'll be doing our best to remain transparent, honest and most of all fair in all of our dealings with our valued customers."

If they'd adopted this, more honest, line then I would not be anywhere near as outraged as I find myself.