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Excellent hand-picked games, 14-day refund policy, always DRM-free.

We want GOG.com to be the home of games that are both excellent and really worth your time.
In today's gaming world, we're seeing more and more titles that become hits before development dwindles down. We want to give you a way to enjoy what these games have to offer, a way that's comfortable and fair to you — the GOG.com way: that means evaluating each and every game, a 14-day no-questions-asked refund policy, and more.




That's why today, we're introducing the first five games in development:
Starbound (-33%)
Ashes of the Singularity (-25%)
Project Zomboid (-40%)
TerraTech (-30%)
The Curious Expedition (-15%)







The GOG.com way.
First and foremost: we're hand-picking only the games we can truly stand behind. Offering a selection of the most promising titles, and those most highly requested on the Community Wishlist, is our way of avoiding bloat and ensuring that every game will be worth your time.

It takes some confidence to discover games that are still being shaped — and to build that trust, every game in development comes with a simple refund policy: 14 days, no questions asked. It doesn't matter if you're having technical issues, if you don't think the game is sufficiently fleshed out, or if it simply doesn't click with you — all games in development can be returned for any reason within 14 days of purchase.

The GOG Galaxy client should also come in handy for games in development. It lets you control updates manually if you want, while the rollback feature allows you to easily restore any earlier version of your game if an update breaks something or makes unwanted changes. For games in development, rollback will also track and create historical snapshots throughout a game's development. That means you can always revisit any point in a game's history — for fun, or for science.






It's your call.
For those of you who prefer to wait for the final release, nothing will change. Once a game leaves active development, we will be making the announcement and giving the newest release proper exposure. Basically, business as usual.






More info.
Surely you have questions. You'll find many of the answers in the <span class="bold">games in development FAQ, including more details on the new refund policy. Our User Agreement has also been expanded to accommodate games in development — check out sections 6.12, 6.13, and 6.14 to find all the new information.




Enjoy your time with games in development!
Post edited January 28, 2016 by Konrad
Project Zomboid. Here?! O_____o
Woohoo! This is an exciting development.
Post edited January 28, 2016 by Barry_Woodward
high rated
Awesome! Bring on The Long Dark and The Forest!
Guess Ill have to buy Starbound again.
Post edited January 28, 2016 by NuffCatnip
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Sachys: Project Zomboid. Here?! O_____o
great! :) I loved the veeeery early prototype, I haven't been watching it for a long time, now it's time I guess to check it out again ;)
high rated
"Excellent hand-picked games" - now, that's definitely a matter of taste ...

Really, I would prefer the declined Nordic games. :(
Great news! This will bring more games to GOG faster.
I'm really happy to see that Starbound has finally made its way here!
And so early access arrives to gog :) Well, Ashes of Singularity looks definitely a game I would like. Does this work without Galaxy or is it mandatory for gog early access games?
Starbound looks like Terraria.

And also, Matruchus' question.
I hope GOG likes Kenshi... That'll hit beta soon apparently.
In other news - WOW! Can't wait til Sunday!
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Matruchus: And so early access arrives to gog :) Well, Ashes of Singularity looks definitely a game I would like. Does this work without Galaxy or is it mandatory for gog early access games?
it says 'multiplayer needs galaxy'. nothing about single player.
edit: on Ashes' game card, not early games in general.
Post edited January 28, 2016 by micktiegs_8
can we hope to get Torment: Tides of Numenera on gog soon?
So GOG Early Access? What if we get a game in development, decide that we don't like it but reconsider after release. Can it be re-bought after a refund? I guess so.
Also where is Torment...
high rated
Hmmm... early access?
Really?

Not so sure about this, though I suppose it makes sense for GoG to try get their slice of the early access pie so people don't buy all the games they are interested in on Steam before they release here..
Plus the refund is nice, though I kind of preferred the Trine 3 version where you could refund any time before the release (if I remember correctly) even if that is a little generous..

Some of the games sound interesting, but I can't really see myself buying unfinished games...