Coelocanth: Just to be clear, I'm not really arguing that GOG should let us cherry pick the games we want from the bundles. My personal beef is they don't offer the same great discounts on individual games that you can get elsewhere. My only point with the bundles is the fact that when I remove games I don't want, the price jumps up (basically doubling) for the game(s) I
do want but that doesn't make me say "Hey, it's still a good deal" - which is probably is - but it just makes me go "Meh, I'll pass'.
Sure, and I felt exactly the same when I checked in Steam if I'd drop the base game from the "Saints Row 3 The Full Package" (because I had it already in Steam), or trying to drop Darksiders and maybe a couple of Darksiders 2 DLCs from the "Darksiders Franchise" bundle.
Especially the latter was actually a bit funny as even the mere Darksiders 2 base game bought separately costs more than the whole franchise bundle. Somehow it doesn't seem like a good deal unless you go with the whole bundle...
It is as if Steam is telling me:
"You already have parts of the franchise separately in our service? Haha, loser! Sucks to be you!"
while GOG promo is saying:
"You bought some parts of the bundle from us already before? Nice, as thanks for that we will give you the full bundle benefit if you decide to buy the missing two games you don't have yet."
Coelocanth: I'm personally not demanding anything. GOG can do what they want with their pricing. I'm not such GOG fanboi that I'll cough up my hard-earned cash just because it's GOG that's offering a game. I'll buy where I feel the best deal is. All I'm pointing out is, as I mentioned at the beginning of this post, they don't seem to be competing with discounts on individual titles and rather seem to be focused more on bundling.
GOG seems to want to give a special reward (=extra discounts) to those who primarily buy from their service, which just makes sense. Obviously if you don't do that, you won't see the same benefits.
But we may be discussing on two different levels here. Your point apparently is that the prices of individual items in GOG is not competitive to the prices on many other stores (e.g. for indie games; then again, can any non-"pay what you want" site beat the Humble Bundle prices for indie games?).
I have been mainly commenting on the idea that GOG should offer the very same full discounts to those who don't want to buy whole bundles for a reason or another, which is what the OP was asking.
The discussion whether GOG prices on the whole are competitive to other sites (regardless of whether we are talking about bundles or individual games) is a separate issue from that.
mondo84: I always like a tiered structure.
Buy one game, 50% off.
Buy two games, 60% off.
Buy three or more games, 70% off.
Me too, but there seemed to be a lot of vocal opposition to those deals, apparently for the same reason as this current model.