NuffCatnip: Some of you are blowing this out of proportion, seriously. Weekends are for relaxation, people aren't robots, you can't work 24/7. Give tech next week to fix this.
But I agree with octalot regarding the removal of the info banner.
I think the majority of the anger is not directed at the staff, but rather management. Those who make the decisions. Those who handle the purse-strings.
If you have a company running a 24/7 platform, one would expect a 24/7 staff. Or at least a 7-day staff with a night watchman. This doesn't mean staff numbers don't fluctuate to a skeleton crew on weekends, but it also doesn't mean more staff shouldn't get called in and paid overtime when the proverbial sh*t hits the fan.
And this situation certainly qualifies as the sh*t hitting the fan. It's FUBAR.
The very point of a gaming platform is to allow customers to buy, download and play their games at all times. This platform has an international customer base. It is not unreasonable to expect that any moment around the globe when a problem occurs which prevents customers from using their purchases that there is a GOG representative ready to answer the call. Other platforms may well afford a larger staff, but they also have a smarter employment pool: they employ international workers to cover all the bases and don't rely on staff living in the same country and visiting travelling to the office every day. GOG is still working on the delusion that you can run a business like this without paying significant overtime/weekend rates.
This current situation proves you can't close the office on Friday afternoon and re-open on Monday morning without extreme risk to your business. Some staff needs to be working or be available to work at all times. And this includes paying a full-time staff position to keep customers regularly updated when a major outage happens.
It's bad enough the community has to endure spam bots every weekend and public holiday because there's no staff lurking to delete the posts. That's an annoyance, but it doesn't involve the chief reason this platform exists for. Now we're enduring having no staff contact, no reassurances that support staff are on the job, and no detectable improvement in the situation this weekend because GOG's accountancy department says it's not worth paying workers on the weekends. And this problem impacts majorly on GOG's primary reason for existing.
On a side note one would have to wonder:
If the problem wasn't a CDN/file problem but rather GOG's entire payment processing system crashing hard, would it still be broken right now?
LesTyebe: Possible upside when this gets sorted out: Somebody in the upper levels of GOG/CDPR decides some positive PR is in order and decrees all current GOG account owners receive one free game of their choice from anything in the entire catalog.
No, we'd probably all get a copy of Jack Keane. :P