I stated the reasons why I feel like that.
Also, I don't quite understand why it is promoted as a third, separate way, to download GOG games. As I mentioned in the previous message, there are two main ways to obtain your GOG games:
- Installing them with Galaxy.
- Downloading the offline installers and installing the games manually.
For that second option, the offline-installers, there certainly are lots of different tools you can use to download those installers. The old unsupported legacy Downloader client is only one of them, so I have no idea why it is always promoted as a separate option.
Different tools to download the offline installers:
- Any web browser. <== the most straightforward option for most - Any web browser with downloader plugins (DownloadThemAll! and what is there, I am not that familiar with them).
- The Galaxy client itself, using the backup function.
- The old, unsupported, cumbersome GOG Downloader client.
- gogrepo.py
- lgogdownloader
- probably various other tools and ways
I personally use two ways to obtain my GOG games:
1. gogrepo.py, to keep a local and up to date collection of all my purchased GOG offline game installers.
2. Sometimes I might just download an odd game directly from GOG, with the Firefox web browser, in case I haven't downloaded it yet with gogrepo, or I am not sure if I have the latest version of the installer, or if i am elsewhere with my laptop without my local GOG installer collection.
Yet, I don't necessarily feel everyone should try to use gogrepo like i do. For most e.g. using a web browser or Galaxy is probably enough. gogrepo serves a special need, mass-downloading all your game installers and keeping the installers up to date easily.