Theta_Sigma: Since you run GOG games on Mac, I find I must ask this. How is the emulation, do you run into many issues or is it fairly smooth? I only ever really use a Mac for editing, and the gaming I have done on one was with Mac native versions of games.
First off, it bears repeating: WINE – and this includes all of its offshoots, including Play on Linux/Mac, Cedega, Cider, Wineskin, Darwine, and CrossOver – is
not emulation (WINE is basically a "backroynm" which means "WINE Is Not an Emulator"). It's basically a binary translation layer that translates application calls to Windows APIs into calls to Linux/OS X APIs. It doesn't work like VMWare, or Parallels. Of course, you still obviously will expect a performance hit to some degree. But in my testing of the several hundred games I have in my library (so far!) most of the limitations in performance that I've experienced are more because of my hardware (the 64 MB GMA 950 in my MacBook) than because I'm not natively running the app in Windows. And compared to the performance drops I've seen associated with native ports in the past, even on Intel Macs, the drop in performance isn't really a huge problem. If you have a recent-enough Mac with decent graphics hardware, it's really not a big deal.
Most of the problems I've come across run the gamut from crashes to desktop, screen corruption, screen tearing, improperly drawn textures, or general wonkiness, but again, a lot of it is either because (a) my graphics hardware is simply too old, or (b) because there were bugs in the game that couldn't be fully fixed by the GOG staff. Yes, some games remain a major sticking point for me (I'm looking at you, Descent 3), but those have been the outliers.
That being said, I've done very, very
very well for myself on GOG, even on a seven year old Mac using 10 year old graphics hardware. The only main problem is the time and effort it takes to get games to work; 60% of the time, a game will need some special attention, either in the form of WINE tweaks, or fan patches, or other steps, to work at their best. If you're willing to put the time and effort into it, any regular Mac user can enjoy the embarrassment of gaming riches offered by the GOG catalog.
htown1980: I also game exclusively on my mac. But i have never had any involvement in the mac community. Do you really think it would be that bad?
I'm trying not to be elitist, but a lot of people would likely say that the quality of the forums took a major dive with each successive leap that GOG took into the mainstream. Will it happen when GOG offers Mac compatibility? I don't know, but my gut is telling me to prepare for the worst.
And even if the Mac users don't lead to even more pollution on the forums, I just
know that places like General Discussion are going to get cluttered with flame threads with platform fanboys (on both sides) who still think that it's 1995.