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My prediction: GOG will become exclusive publisher of "The Bard: Saviors of Queens" to be developed by CD Projekt.
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bazilisek: I am genuinely excited to see what kind of hype-fail is hiding behind "GOG.com will go public with the biggest change to the service since launching from beta".
Isn't that the truth? Weeks of hype will lead to something about as important as announcing GOGMixes. Huzzah? :)
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bazilisek: I am genuinely excited to see what kind of hype-fail is hiding behind "GOG.com will go public with the biggest change to the service since launching from beta".
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SimonG: Last time it was not only old but also new games. Maybe they just skip the pretence now and go only new games.
"The effort that goes into making old games run on new machines and the amount of flak we get from people who can't get the games to run on their machines has simply gotten to be too much. So instead of sticking with what we have become known for everywhere online, we're going to just focus on DRM-free new games and leave that other stuff in the nursing home. Today's special releases: EA's Syndicate (2012), Amnesia: The Dark Descent, and Bejeweled 3, all DRM-free! All DLC 50% off, too, for the next 3 hours."

http://i.imgur.com/XNhfI.gif
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Starkrun: Im 100% totally freaked out and geeked to the MAX, were talking lvl 4 super sayian on acid while drinking pure caffine powder mixed with Mt. DEW! Ok so thats extreme but Divinty 2 Developer edition holy CATS man I cant wait !
Nice. Looks interesting.
Off Topic: That's my daughter's 20th birthday, and no, you cannot have here number lol.
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tfishell: I think I'm one of the few that is interested in "old games" announcements, and am hoping they have something to say about them besides giving us literally unbeatable deals for ones already on the site.
Keep for me a sit just next to you...We will 'booooo' together every time game 2K+ will be annouced :-P

Althought I keep my fingers crossed (and wallet ready) for the next wave of EA classics - I don't think there will be anything really cool about classics this time.
Post edited October 14, 2012 by tburger
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tfishell: I think I'm one of the few that is interested in "old games" announcements, and am hoping they have something to say about them besides giving us literally unbeatable deals for ones already on the site.
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tburger: Keep for me a sit just next to you...We will 'booooo' together every time game 2K+ will be annouced :-P Althought I keep my fingers crossed (and wallet ready) for the next wave of EA classics - I don't think there will be anything really cool about classics this time.
Ha ha. ;) (We'll see if I have access to a computer or streaming media when this happens; I may have to get the "play-by-play" from a forum member.) I guess last week got me a little crotchety. I mean, 2000-2004-ish I can handle, but just a 2008 game? I was disappoint on Thursday with Blitzkrieg 2 and nothing older.

I'd love to see something about EA classics too for sure, but release of the expansions for current games is quite important to me, too.
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jamyskis: * GOG would be launching an optional but fully fledged client that handles friends lists, in-game overlay, autopatching (which SimonG would doubtless be over the moon about) etc. *
That sounds the most probable of the actually remarkable changes.

However, what I'd really like it to be would be some kind of emulator or virtual machine for running older GOG Windows games hardware-independently, a bit like DOSBox. Some people are already working on getting Win9x (and Win9x games) to run inside DOSBox.

If it needs real Windows (files) to run, that may not be quite feasible due to Microsoft. Unless it would be something like WINE?
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timppu: Unless it would be something like WINE?
Wine would certainly work... just as soon as someone manages to get in running on Windows.

Reinventing the wheel just to have a new piece of software to do the same thing (especially such an advanced piece of software) is hardly feasible, better to build on the base that's already there.
Post edited October 14, 2012 by Miaghstir
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keeveek: I am slightly excited towards GOG press conference. It won't be anything revolutionary (at least not for me), but they usually announce some newest upcoming releases and some sweet deals, so it's worth waiting. I just hope they'll handle live streaming better than cdp.pl with theirs >.>
Yes, the only thing I'm excited for, are the upcoming new releases they are planning to announce. I hope they are getting in some of the newer games, DRM-free, but that might be a little wishful.
Post edited October 14, 2012 by Nicole28
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Miaghstir: Wine would certainly work... just as soon as someone manages to get in running on Windows.
I already did... sort of. :)

http://www.gog.com/en/forum/general/icewind_dale_vistax64_compatibility/post137
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Starkrun:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XwamV1fbYQk
Auto patching takes control away from the user, i want to patch when i want...

currently i get a little (1) on my name saying looky we have an update and i download and archive said update... if thats taken away they are no more then a steam clone...

make the client, make others happy... But allow those who want to manage there own patches and files have that ability. Do not force a client on anyone, it must remain optional.
I thought this was about the Quest for Glory kickstarter. But then I realised that is October 19...
I'm prepared to be underwhelmed again. I'd love to be proven wrong though.
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timppu: Some people are already working on getting Win9x (and Win9x games) to run inside DOSBox.
There are actually quite a few projects that could contribute to establishing a full Win9x-compatible environment. DOSBox and WINE are just two - Bochs and ReactOS could also offer a few interesting things.

Part of the problem with DOSBox is that the DOSBox authors seem extremely resistant to the idea of running Windows 95 or 98 in DOSBox, constantly seeing the need to remind people that it wasn't designed for that although it is more or less in keeping with what DOSBox was designed for - running old games.

WINE could be interesting though if the actual execution could be modified to run on a virtual machine à la Java with a fully emulated processor as opposed to the native hardware.