Slashdot Mirror


DRM-Free Games Site GOG.com Gone

An anonymous reader writes "Just a day after adding a new game and a handful of promotions, GOG.com, a seller of classic games in a DRM-free format, has closed shop, leaving only a sparse placeholder page and a mention on Twitter that 'sometimes it's really hard being DRM-free... hard to keep things the way they are and keep management and publishers happy.' The site mentions that games purchased in the past will become accessible for downloading within the week, but there is no word on how long this will continue to be possible." The announcement on the site's front page says, in part, "This doesn't mean the idea behind GOG.com is gone forever. We're closing down the service and putting this era behind us as new challenges await."

18 of 326 comments (clear)

  1. Sigh by cstec · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Publishers don't get it. I purchased more games from GoG in a year than I have in the last 10 through any other channel. Specifically BECAUSE they were DRM-free. ;-/

    1. Re:Sigh by InfiniteWisdom · · Score: 4, Insightful

      People don't go into business just to "make their money back" any more than you work your job to make just enough to pay your rent and feed yourself.

    2. Re:Sigh by emkyooess · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This, here, is the exact reason why GOG was the greatest.

    3. Re:Sigh by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Uh...I do. The vast majority of people live paycheck to paycheck and are just trying to break even.

      Which is why you have given up on paying for broadband (you're typing this at the library, right?), don't have a cell phone, don't drink alchohol or eat out, only have one pair of shoes, no TV, no camera, don't by games or music or go to movies, and work a second job evenings and weekends so that you can save up some money, right?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:Sigh by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because DOSBox sucks the big wet titty when it comes to setting it up yourself, with lots of hit or miss crap, and compatibility mode doesn't work on x86 Ring 0 DRM? let me compare DOSBox with GoG with a game I owned and re-bought from GoG when they first offered it...Redneck Rampage. with DOSBox it was 1.-deal with Build engine patch which did NOT like x64, 2.-try different settings trying to get sound stable, 3.-have it CTD more often than not, as well as random lockups.

      Now lets compare that to the GoG Redneck Rampage DOSBox experience. 1.-download game, all patches and expansions already preloaded. 2.-run install, which is "clicky clicky". 3.-play game perfectly on windows 7 x64 with no hassles.

      See the difference? I have bought a bunch of older games like RR and Fallout from GoG simply because they remove all the hassles and make it all just click n' run. I only hope GoG comes back so I can load up on the older games like Blood I hadn't picked up yet. But believe me the GoG experience was well worth it, even on newer games. I bought King's Bounty: The Legend but when I switched to x64 I never could seem to get it to run (my guess, shitty DRM) but the GoG version? Ran beautifully OOTB. If any GoG developers read this, thanks. Your site was the first and often only site I went to when I was bored and wanted a new game. you WILL be missed.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    5. Re:Sigh by InfiniteWisdom · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Uh...I do. The vast majority of people live paycheck to paycheck and are just trying to break even.

      That's the situation they're in, not their goal. The goal is to make enough to live a comfortable life with lots of things they want but don't need.

    6. Re:Sigh by tehcyder · · Score: 3, Insightful

      These old games made their money back ages ago, everyone involved has other jobs. I don't feel like I'm depriving anyone when I grab a torrent of DOS classics.

      If the copyright holder has decided to release these games into the public domain, then fair enough. If not, I don't really care what your deluded self-justifications are.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  2. "Publisher" is the problem. by unity100 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    in the age of internet and digital downloads, the middleman, publisher, is the problem. not needed anymore, yet they still introduce problems into the production to consumer sequence, right in the middle. actually, in some sectors, they totally control entire sequence.

    they need to be removed.

  3. Re:More to the story.. by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My thoughts exactly. They announce a sale on the 16th and on the 17th close down stating "they've thought long and hard about it".

    Curious to see what happens next. Had quite a few more purchases planned with them, but in light of the circumstances...

    --

    People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
  4. From their Facebook page... by owlman17 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Posted 3 hours ago:

    The official statement from GOG.com's management about the whole situation will be announced soon. We'll have more details about this tomorrow.

    Sigh. Sure hope this isn't just a gimmick. Like many here, I still have or had quite a number of planned purchases.

  5. I reckon Joystiq needs some reading comprehension by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's no "stunt" to this. It says right in their notice that the site is ending in its "current form" and that it will eventually return. Which contrasts with Joystiq's sensationalist headline that GOG "shuts down" (also Slashdot's).

    What CD Projekt actually said in the forum was that posting the notice on the current site (which IS closed and isn't just going to be reactivated) was part of a process to raise awareness of the new site that will take its place, which is pretty plain from the notice that they posted, had anyone bothered to actually read it.

    Marketing yes, stunt no. This isn't Death (and Return) of Superman. They said right up front what was going to happen. Just because people glossed over the text and rushed to print a headline, well, that kind of makes the editors at Joystiq (and Slashdot) out to look like tools. Don't try to shift blame to CD Projekt for this.

  6. Re:GOG was great, but Steam is easier by chris411 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Having purchased games from both GOG and Steam, I'd pick GOG over Steam any day. I'd argue that Steam made it more complicated, if only because they force you to install and use a client. And then it forces me to download the game again if I choose to uninstall it from my HD. GOG was a simple download and install, always. I never had to download the game again after uninstalling it, I could just burn it to DVD as is, or move it to another HD.

  7. Re:Good by chris411 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That's a blatant lie.

    They offered old games that worked on modern systems without tinkering. Can't get that on Piratebay. You sure can get dubious "cracks" and viruses though!

  8. yo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But the cool thing is, this doesn't affect their customers' ability to play games in any way.

    If Steam shut down, though...

  9. Re:Too bad but not that surprising by c0d3g33k · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think they provided enough of a value-add above and beyond the (IMHO very good) value they offered on the games. For example, DRM-free was great, and the price was right, but they didn't really play up the fact that purchasing through them rather than torrenting provided a *legal* copy to the purchaser. It may seem a rather trivial thing, but these days in which everyone is presumed to be an illegal downloader and the 'rightsholder police' can threaten lawsuits on a whim, the ability to produce valid proof of ownership is powerful. "Why, no, I did not pirate that game - in fact, here is a copy of my proof of purchase certificate (digitally signed and verifiable as authentic by downloading GoG's public verification key). As you can see, your honor, I have the right to possess a copy of the game. The plaintiff has no case." I tried a few times on the forums to advocate that they provide some sort of distinct proof of purchase, whether a signed 'digital receipt' of some sort, or even a nicely formatted pdf document that provided proof of ownership, but nobody was interested.

    Other areas they might have explored: tangible media (for an extra fee) and gifting (with on-demand shipping of hard copies ready for wrapping). The former would be great for those that want a disk for backup/security purposes, or nice graphics and a case. The latter would be useful for giving 'Cousin Bob who loved Psychonauts but can't play his copy on the new PC' a cool gift for christmas that you could wrap up and put under the tree. GoG did gift certificates or somesuch thing, as I recall, but that is just no substitute for something that can be unwrapped and admired. Maybe the answer is to partner with someone like Amazon who has the infrastructure to target a broad audience and could properly sell the DRM-free message, as well as produce and ship tangible media at reasonable cost for those that want to purchase gifts.

    All in all, DRM-free at a low price alone wasn't enough.

  10. Re:GOG was great, but Steam is easier by Torodung · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It wasn't racism, but it is prejudice.

    He admits to never having used steam and yet declares he will never use it.

    Used, dude, not seen.

    We could equally ask why most have a prejudice against dying, never having "tried it?" Of course, people generally come to that conclusion because they've witnessed it and/or heard anecdotes about it. Fact is, direct experience and/or experimentation is often a bad way to form an opinion.

    Or we could try heroin together, just to be sure, right? ;^)

    What the GP expressed is called a "preference," as in, "I will never try sushi because I am afraid of the potential bacteria/contamination issues." A sushi fan can reassure the person of the hygienic nature of the food to no end, but the person has a reasoned aversion based on fact (uncooked food can carry food-borne illness) which is, in the view of a sushi fan, unreasonable.

    Such a fan has a prejudice against facts, however, because he's conflating facts with opinion. In the GP's Steam case, "I don't like the idea of needing a network connection to acquire games," is enough. It is factual, as Steam requires it. "My catalog could be cut off arbitrarily with no remedy" passes muster, too, as it is a part of the user agreement.

    These are facts.

    It is your opinion that it is unreasonable to believe that these facts will come to any great losses, and you are likely to be correct, but that is not a fact, it is merely presumption.

    Prejudice happens when it is a known fact that what the person believes is utterly untrue or distorted, and they don't realize it because they are unwilling to find out, or even believe accounts refuting their prejudice. I really doubt, after all these years of Steam being around, that anyone is stalking the net badmouthing Steam having never seen or understood it.

    Give me a break. The GP has a preference for an alternate means of game purchase. Those options exist and he's willing to pay more for it, and that's the end of it. It isn't remotely prejudice, just because you disagree.

    --
    Toro

  11. Re:GOG was great, but Steam is easier by datajack · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sure, one day in the hypothetical future Valve's servers could disappear, leaving you unable to play your games any more. This is no different from non-DRM-encumbered games you own on physical media, which could stop working at any time due to loss of or damage to the CDs.

    Wrong. there is one big difference.
    It['s a thing that is becoming more and more fashionable to ignore and pretend doesn't exist. It's called responsibility.

    Looking after my copies of my games bought from GOG is my responsibility. I have all the tools at hand to protect against any loss of data. If one copy is lost or damaged, I have a backup copy (which I can then use to make another copy just in case I have another accident). If something happens to that data, it's my fault and my problem.

    If Steam (or whatever other service) goes away or is taken away, it's someone else's fault but my problem.

  12. Re:More to the story.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    couldnt agree more. The slashdot crowd whine like children about DRM but when a DRM-free site appears, they ignroe it and all get their games from torrents anyway.
    Typical fucking hypocrites. No wonder we have DRM and no wonder it is here to stay.