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Dave3d: Advent Rising: I cant even steer. Crash into the tub x10000. Wont even try the game anymore.
Is there a way to gift some of the games to someone else?

I had that problem but was able to fix it... somehow. There's a support article on it. But if the solution worked for me, it didn't do so immediately. Damn shame I can't remember what DID work now.
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lowyhong: I'm probably going to abstain from buying anymore GOGs until there's an indication that GOG's still actively working to make these games work properly.

We seriously need Win7 support. But then some games like Overseer were completely unstable to the point of not allowing you to progress at all even on XP. Hopefully GOG will hire on some more testers to fix some of the major problems people are having.
Post edited March 04, 2010 by Navagon
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stonebro: I suspect GOG have had to rush a few releases because of the whole Activision thing. They've been known to make amends for initial bugs before, even those that are not theirs, such as the helicopter boss crash bug in Duke Nukem: Manhattan Project.
Releasing several older multi-disc FMV games, as well as Interstate '76 which has been notorious for being ridiculously hard to get working properly on newer systems for a while, in such a short time-span, has probably affected the overall test and QA time available for each release and thus more users than normal have problems with them.

Still defending GOG I see.
Post edited March 04, 2010 by JacobNZ
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JacobNZ: Still defending GOG I see.

What the hell? Nah man, when a release has a problem we should jump on them like rabid dogs! Damn huge corporations like GOG!
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JacobNZ: Still defending GOG I see.
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Kakihara: What the hell? Nah man, when a release has a problem we should jump on them like rabid dogs! Damn huge corporations like GOG!

So basically, the threshold for whether or not a company/corporation/whatever should be held accountable is how large it is?
Seriously, if this were EA or Activision (or even Valve), everyone would be freaking out and threatening to boycott (and mocking everyone who doesn't immediately start a boycott). :p
That being said: Yeah, there are always going to be problems. Arx still has the savegame bug that periodically makes me lose all interest in it after having to redo an hour of gameplay again. UFO: Aftershock (or 'math, whichever one came first) still is a bit hinky when first running for a lot of people.
But by and large, there are a lot fewer problems than the original release, and that is worth a lot.
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Ralackk: Install and play psychonauts.
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Weclock: lol way to troll 'em
the last level of psychonauts will make you want to rip out your spinal cord and use it to play folk tunes on the worlds smallest violin.

Well the games great up till that point. I never even consider that part when recommending psychonauts maybe my mind is trying to forget how rage inducing it was.
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Ralackk: Well the games great up till that point. I never even consider that part when recommending psychonauts maybe my mind is trying to forget how rage inducing it was.
I haven't even gotten to that point in the game. I just take it on good authority that it's a terrible part.
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Weclock: I haven't even gotten to that point in the game. I just take it on good authority that it's a terrible part.

Yea its horrible, games got a nice steady difficulty curve and then this section is like running into a brick wall.
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Dave3d: Advent Rising: I cant even steer. Crash into the tub x10000. Wont even try the game anymore.

I doubt you are as dumb as me, but it took me forever to realize that I was supposed to steer the car with the mouse and not the a and d keys.
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Dave3d: Is there a way to install the GoG games on the 98 machine?

You double click the Setup Executable file to initiate the installation process and then you double click on the Game Executable.
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Dave3d: Is there a way to install the GoG games on the 98 machine?
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TheJoe: You double click the Setup Executable file to initiate the installation process and then you double click on the Game Executable.

Except for the fact that the GOG installer will not actually run on a Win 98 machine at all, it will just error out when run. It only works on XP or higher (it might also work on Win2K).
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Dave3d: Man, I have had the worst luck with the latest games from GoG.
Interstate 76: Cant even really play it. Even with some of the workarounds, it is bad.
Bloodrayne: Stupid spider gets stuck on the tree, and wont become unstuck (even on reloading).
Bloodrayne 2: This one isnt gog's fault (if any of them are even), but what crappy handling this game has. Seems to be almost unplayable with mouse/keyboard (the seperate camera is horrible).
Advent Rising: I cant even steer. Crash into the tub x10000. Wont even try the game anymore.
So, of the 5 games I have bought in the last few weeks, 4 are unplayable, and the last 1 (Psychonauts) I havent tried yet.
Is there a way to gift some of the games to someone else?

I've bought a few GoG games and I've not had a problem, but for those who are, have you considered running a virtual machine using Microsoft Virtual PC (it's free) or something similar. You can easily install and use any OS (that you own) from 95 onwards I think (and even DOS if you need to).
I would think that with today's powerful computers, running a GoG game in a VM shouldn't be too much of a problem.
Cheers
Mark
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Dave3d: Man, I have had the worst luck with the latest games from GoG.
Interstate 76: Cant even really play it. Even with some of the workarounds, it is bad.
Bloodrayne: Stupid spider gets stuck on the tree, and wont become unstuck (even on reloading).
Bloodrayne 2: This one isnt gog's fault (if any of them are even), but what crappy handling this game has. Seems to be almost unplayable with mouse/keyboard (the seperate camera is horrible).
Advent Rising: I cant even steer. Crash into the tub x10000. Wont even try the game anymore.
So, of the 5 games I have bought in the last few weeks, 4 are unplayable, and the last 1 (Psychonauts) I havent tried yet.
Is there a way to gift some of the games to someone else?
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mgarnett: I've bought a few GoG games and I've not had a problem, but for those who are, have you considered running a virtual machine using Microsoft Virtual PC (it's free) or something similar. You can easily install and use any OS (that you own) from 95 onwards I think (and even DOS if you need to).
I would think that with today's powerful computers, running a GoG game in a VM shouldn't be too much of a problem.
Cheers
Mark

However, VMs don't fully support hardware accelerated video, so any games from the "3D era" are very likely to not work in one. Those that aren't from the "3D era" are pretty much already running in a virtual machine, as most, if not all of them already rely on DOSBox of ScummVM to provide OS compatibility, so adding the extra layer of another VM is just pointless.
Even if someone works on compatibility unforseen issues can arise. Personally only two games don't want to work for me. Divine Divinity likes to crash 100 times in the first dungeon while Arx Fatalis is just unstable on a whole. Out of the 30 or so games I own only a couple of bad apples so it isn't the service man.
Advent Rising crashes like it's nobody's business, but that's just because the game was coded by Helen Keller apparently. Surprisingly it is still a fun game.
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Ralackk: Install and play psychonauts.
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Weclock: lol way to troll 'em
the last level of psychonauts will make you want to rip out your spinal cord and use it to play folk tunes on the worlds smallest violin.

Apparently I'm the only person that didn't think the last level was that hard.
It was harder than the rest of the game, but I beat it in probably two sittings.