BranjoHello: Basically, I would like for GOG.com to be a vault of every game ever released.
...snip
You have fallen for a common misconception. GOG is not a vault, an archive, a public library or anything else. It is a business selling a product. It’s not going to have games that make no money, it’s not doing this for your benefit or the benefit of humanity.
Cadaver747: Now I know what a true hardcore gamer is. With all my love for FPS games including some obscure titles you showed me what it's like to appreciate FPS games for real.
Anime-BlackWolf: Conservation / Preservation of old games / movies / music is VERY important for me. Either if they are good OR BAD.
I had much fun playing nonsense like "Last Rites" (completed it without cheats in the 90s) or "Fortress of Dr.Radiaki" (failed, because it went far to difficult later on) or the "Isle of the Dead".
Last one is pretty unique, because it has parts of an ordinary point-and-click-adventure in it. Unfortunately not enough, but anyway. The shooter section is partly garbage, because of the re-spawning enemies. It IS doable, but only with save-scumming. Either way, it is kind of funny, with nice cutscenes (but not enough of those, either). :(
Good / bad is in the eye of the beholder. I HATE many of the pretty games from AAA Studios of today, would play NES/SNES/C-64/AMIGA or "shit" like the Capstone games instead of them.
So yeah, there is a market for everything, so if GOG makes okay money with "bad titles", they should bring those, too. Nobody is forced to buy them.
That’s the point though, they are here to make money. If something doesn’t sell, then they lose. If they don’t think they would make money on something, then there is no point putting the effort in getting it working, having storage to deliver it, getting all the required permissions, adding galaxy functionality, creating and updating the installers etc. You have to as a business, not an archiver, evaluate cost against perceived profits. That is how business works.
If you want an archive or something like that, then it needs to be a not for profit or otherwise funded project, like archive.org. It’s not the domain of business.
Breja: I just re-watched the first two TekWar movies recently, for the first time since the 90s. I had no idea there was a game. Very interesting.
Cadaver747: I did not know there are TekWar movies, I watched TV series only with William Shatner.
One of the best game reviews, you will not be disappointed, maybe a little:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Tnqs2OIM44 Cool, I had forgotten that. 1995 cyberpunk open world game, and it’s still better than cyberpunk 2077!