GoldenCavalier: JRPG's aren't my thing, I really don't care for the anime style. Never heard the term WRPG before. Honestly I always just called them RPG's even though they were on computer.
The way I see the terminology is as follows:
* RPG: Term that includes both table-top and computer RPGs. Usually, depending on context, it's meant to refer to one or the other.
* CRPG: Refers to RPGs played on a computer (or video game console). Notably, this includes both WRPGs and JRPGs, but doesn't include table top games like Dungeons & Dragons (though there are CRPGs based on D&D).
* WRPG: The style of RPG that's traditionally made by western developers. These tend to take a more simulationist approach. (For example, an item that you drop will typically stay on the ground.)
* JRPG: The style of RPG that's traditionally made by Japanese developers. These tend to take a more simplified approach. (For example, if you drop an item (assuming the game implements that option), it will just disappear.
Note that WRPG and JRPG refer to styles of RPG, not necessarily to where they were actually developed.
There's also some cases of games that mix styles: Dragon Quest 1 has some characteristics more common in WRPGs of the era (non-linear open world, keys are consumables, dungeons are dark unless you use a torch or light spell), and the Romancing SaGa games, which are rather unconventional, are non-linear the way many WRPGs tend to be.
dtgreene: Actually, in my case for me it's more like desiring to play old WRPGs (let's be honest: GOG's selection of old JRPGs is basically non-existent; nearly every CRPG on GOG, particularly if we focus on older ones, is a WRPG) that I have n ever played before. I believe my first purchase here was, in fact, the Might and Magic 6-pack. (Incidentally, I think I enjoyed 3 more than Xeen, and 2 more than 3, back then.)
Now I'm seriously thinking of playing Shard of Spring and/or Demon's Winter.
(Of course, I've been side-tracked into playing incremental games, but as I get more used to them, I could, perhaps, be comfortable playing both at the same time.)
GoldenCavalier: JRPG's aren't my thing, I really don't care for the anime style. Never heard the term WRPG before. Honestly I always just called them RPG's even though they were on computer. The entire Might and Magic series were among my first purchases as well. I'd only played through 3 way back when, with 3 being one of the first games I ever played after upgrading from my C64 to an IBM clone! Games like this, Ultima, Bard's Tale, Wasteland, these were the things I was looking to replay and then find similar games I'd never tried. GOG made all of that real simple for me at a price point I couldn't believe, and every game I've tried since coming here has worked for me with no issues.
Might and Magic 1 and Wasteland were among my first games completed on GOG Galaxy, and I couldn't resist Bard's Tale 4 which I enjoyed immensely! I don't like trying to play more than one game at a time so I've bounced around between franchises a bit and currently I've circled back to Might and Magic 2. I always buy game's on sale, but I've been happy to support GOG by building a library of games to keep me entertained for years to come!
Worth noting that playing multiple games as once is significantly less of an issue if all but one of them are incremental games. In incremental games, you can continue to progress when not interacting with the game, and sometimes you have to wait to continue, so you can do other things, like play other games, in the meantime.