Erick_BR: GOG, where are the AAA game additions from 2012 to 2014, many of them from PS3 and some from early PS4? Why games like Dead Space 2, Dead Space 3, Dead Island, Dead Island 2, Rayman Legends, Dragon Age Inquisitions, Fallout 4, Resident Evil HD Remaster, some Need for Speed didn't make it into the collection?
GOG wants to specialize in indie games and crap 18?
There are many great indie games which are also not in the collection, like Takeover, Stray, Sky Force that I already sent a message asking them to sell it through GOG, but I was duly ignored.
What's going on with GOG?
Here we go again.
Every couple of months, someone who hasn't been here for a while and then not investigated properly, complains about the lack of new Old Games at GOG, despite GOG still regularly providing. GOG provide different games in waves, so you need to pay attention regularly or investigate more deeply.
Of course, what it often boils down to, is that GOG haven't provided the ones the OP wants.
In reality, GOG are often between a rock and a hard place, where many games are very difficult to acquire due to licensing issues, and they are up against providers who have most of the power and so call most of the shots. In the end it is about making palatable agreements with game providers, and GOG like any business, needs to do what is best for them.
For GOG to survive it is about their cash flow rate. In other words they need to sell XX amount each week or month or year. Just because a game appears on GOG, doesn't mean it sells well. There are many games at GOG that I still want, and would buy instantly if they were a fair price. I've bought a lot already, so I am no slouch, but I refuse to pay inflated prices.
So I don't blame GOG getting games that sell easily and well. That has meant a lot more Indie games, and a bunch of those are erotic and mostly not in my fields of interest, but I am guessing they bring in customers and good profits.
Generally old games need a fair amount of work to be able to run properly on current Windows OS, which is either done by the game provider or GOG. All that is up against games that GOG can provide here much more simply. So GOG would be following an agenda and prioritizing. It is all about compromise.
GOG are not Steam and they cannot promise or bargain with the idea of big profits. And how big a profit it needs to be, is often in the mind of the provider. As GOG grows bigger though, some things improve.
You also need to consider, that while every year we get another round of games becoming Old Games, much of the truly old games, that were easier to obtain have already been here at GOG, and so the ones left are harder to get. And GOG explained to us recently, how much is involved in getting a game and then getting it to work on latest Windows. So in reality it is about a mix. GOG will spend a lot of effort on a few games, while then having to provide others that aren't so costly and hard to provide.
There are only so many hours in a day and financial resources and competent staff etc.
I personally believe GOG are trying their best.
But as a I said earlier, GOG are between a rock and a hard place, where game providers call most of the shots, including pricing. And DRM-Free is a hard sell to game providers, and even a lot of gamers.