LordRikerQ: Actually Konami put Silent Hill:Homecoming on Steam, so they cant be that adverse, GoG is much better then Steam.
Well spotted. They do seem to be releasing newer titles on Steam now. Nothing old enough to be GOG-able yet. Encouraging, but there are some major problems that remain. Summed up by you calling GOG a better DD service in fact.
GOG is better... for the consumer. For publishers Steam is infinitely better. If the publisher wants regional restrictions or regional price fixing then GOG won't provide that when Steam will. Steam is its own DRM and allows third party DRM on top of that. GOG doesn't allow any at all. Steam isn't even quick to remove broken content from sale and will even release games knowing that they won't work for 99% of people. GOG actually get the games working themselves.
Steam is very flexible on prices, allowing a lot of DLC to go for mere pennies and Activision to fleece people with its map packs. GOG has two fixed price points. Something which is both good and bad for the consumer. It's certainly not helping the number of games on GOG.
Another thing that's not so great about GOG is that they're plainly snubbing indie devs, preferring instead to deal with IP squatters like Interplay and shady companies like Strategy First. Steam has probably been the single biggest asset to indie devs the industry has ever produced.
All in all, GOG doesn't offer much to major publishers aside from the possibility of shifting games they've long since given up on the idea of profiting from.
Aatami: They'd need fixing up before they are worth selling here.
And GOG only does so much. You could only expect the game to be as good as it was back in the day.