keeveek: When you wake from your wintersleep, gog, most people's wallets may be already empty.
Does anyone from gog community has similar thoughts to me?
I don't think the point of these current aggressive sales (including OnLive's "Get any game for $1!" deal a couple of days ago) have that much to do with making quick extra buck for either the digital distributors, let alone the IP owners of the games. This, even though it is true people tend to buy games on promos that they possibly would not otherwise buy, but then promos come and go.
It has more to do with getting as many new users locked to their DRM delivery system as possible, now that there are more and more such distributors around, Origin is picking up, OnLive is getting more and more prominent etc. The more they can get folks signed now when the gold rush is on, the more secure their future is because there is inertia preventing people from changing their DRM-distributor on a whim. The Christmas season is the good hunting season for new customers because people are willing to spend money now.
GOG is in a bit different situation because there is only a faint, if any, umbilical cord connecting GOG users to the GOG service, thanks to the DRM-free nature of GOG games. Thus it does not make quite as much sense for GOG to join the current rush for as many new customers as possible in the least possible time (or locking their old customers even tighter to the current distributor so that they wouldn't even look elsewhere), as for the DRM sites, even if it means someone may be buying a $1 OnLive game instead of a $5 GOG game.