HaaYaargh: And yes, Multiplayer uses GOG Galaxy to run, so it needs to be open in order to play. As usual singleplayer mode is totally DRM-Free™, so it can be played without GOG Galaxy
torham: So this is yet another game which does not have any modes of DRM-Free multiplayer. I'm not sure why when only a PART of the game is without DRM then that means the game is DRM-Free. At least GOG is finally admitting Galaxy is DRM encumbered.
I think you're mislead. I hate DRM as much as many other Goglodytes, but what you're describing isn't genuine DRM. Just because a client is involved, it doesn't mean it's Digital Rights Management. Sure, that's how Steam works in many cases: No login to your Steam account, no gaming :-(
However, the Steam client also offers some functionality for developers to make their life easier and save them development costs, e.g. a framework for easy multiplayer integration. Since the client is mandatory, this infrastructure is widely used to cut costs and development time, by simple refraining from implementing an own multiplayer solutions. In the past, the downside for GOG was, that those game's multiplayer mode couldn't be transferred to GOG, even if the game was DRM free, because of the missing Steam framework. So GOG offered Galaxy with similar functionalities to help developers releasing their games here, without the need of implementing multiplayer or achievements from scratch.
If you want to blame somebody, blame the game developing studios focussed on Steam and its framework. GOG is just trying to work the market and to break Steam's clever plan of having exclusive games due to offering an helpful but proprietary framework.
Btw, you might even be able to add a game locally installed to Galaxy and use multiplayer, even if the account logged in via Galaxy doesn't own the game on GOG. This should also be legal under certain circumstances, because GOG allows you to install the game multiple times on PCs in your household. If for example your child has an own GOG account and you installed the game on the family PC, your child could add it to their Galaxy session and play it without owning it themselves. Though, I've never tried something like this, because there's no such constellation at my home. Still, if it works, it'd be the definite proof that Galaxy is not about DRM.