Posted August 28, 2021
low rated
Fair enough.
And you're making a strawman. I specifically cited the map, not a shirt.
1) Do you own the/your game
No, even without DRM. The standard seems to be you never own any digital goods or services you purchase. I don't even own my copy of any random open source project. 1b) Do you own your save data
That's a tossup, but i'm gonna bet that if it went to a court it'd be ruled "no" to preserve the status quo. This was never really tested, though. 2) If they shut it down do you keep your game?
You mean their game? (Back to qustion 1) 3) Can you run your own server?
Physically yes, but legally no. Now i'll assume we're talking Gwent, but any game that is online-only, be it an MMO or whatnot would fall into this category. So...
I was more moving towards the CP2077 thing or anything else new that came out. Specifically people can make a case for GWENT, but I'd like to hear a strong one for the map. 1) Probably not.. WoW and other MMO's that i kinda might have liked can just be shut off with the flick of a switch unless you're provided a server or some way to run it locally (Terraria/Minecraft being good examples of the setup)
Legally no. You never own software unless you write it yourself from scratch, and even then you can't be employed by anyone who can argue that you wrote it for them, and that includes a school (which is really shady shit). 1b) Probably not.. They may keep your data but you can't export/import it, look at it, clean it up, or anything with it. Some companies like Nintendo, if you are off by a single day of your 'subscription' you lose all your gamesaves and potentially any 'virtual console' games you bought...
Last i heard, Nintendo has a grace period, even if it is a bit tight. 2&3) So unless you're given your own server or a way to emulate it, no.
Games as a service and always-online are the same. Just trying to rebrand it... like how loot boxes is gambling but EA Blizzard and others are saying it's 'surprise mechanics' to delay the inevitable shutdown of their cash cow... but that's another topic.
Well we'd be on the same side, but there are people here on GOG who'd like to argue otherwise, but now suddenly they're absent from the conversation. Games as a service and always-online are the same. Just trying to rebrand it... like how loot boxes is gambling but EA Blizzard and others are saying it's 'surprise mechanics' to delay the inevitable shutdown of their cash cow... but that's another topic.
kohlrak: More like the last organic butcher in a town that has yet to define what "organic" even means, in a town full of meat butchers (itch, dlsite, Zoom, humble, Jast, and a few others might sell titles with DRM in them, but they certainly mostly sell DRM-free). Since the most recent example is the CP2077 map, most would say it crosses the line even you have drawn here. However, technically it hasn't, since it's not a core game, but a feature. I'm wondering at what point we can say that GOG is no different from the others and also isnt' selling organic (exclusively DRM-free) when it's the one that somehow was granted the exclusive power of defining organic. What line does GOG have to cross before we recognize the others again because GOG's only claim to fame is having the keys to the kingdom and still managing to get locked out 'cause it can't help dropping them?
StingingVelvet: You're treating the subject as black and white and I'm just saying it's more nuanced. Does a promo shirt make a game DRM'd when 99.99999% of it and anything you'd actually care about is not? I know some here would say it's an easy yes, but I doubt most of the silent majority out there would agree. Also those other sites you mention don't sell DRM free games to the extent GOG does, both selection wise and budget wise, and let's not pretend otherwise.
Ah, but at least when i go to those sites I can actually trust when there's DRM that they tell us there's DRM, unlike GOG. GOG was intrusted to no DRM at all, but it's already violated it with GWENT and CP2077, and the multiplayer stuff but we seem to give them a pass on that. What's that F.E.A.R. has SecuROM in the DLCs? I'm fine with keeping GOG honest and they've definitely waded into questionable waters, but I don't think acting like these are easy definitions helps anything. Heck some people consider a disc check to be DRM, it's never been an easy definition.
I'll give you that, but everyone has a threshhold to get crossed, and this topic specifically is to see where we actually define things. Is the map, with an always-online (not a one time online like the shirt) requirement DRM, especially given it's a companion for CP2077 which is a single-player game?