Good Old Games Adds Mac OS X Support
SquarePixel writes "The nostalgic games seller Good Old Games has added Mac OS X support to its platform and a catalog of games to go with it. 'During its much-ballyhooed news-a-thon, GOG drew back the curtain on a new version of its service tailored to Macs, which brings with it 50 games (eight of which you receive free just for signing up) and some rather tempting deals. Speaking of, there's this insane 32-game pay-what-you-want Interplay special leading the charge in celebration of GOG's fourth anniversary.'"
Unfortunately, Linux support doesn't seem to be in the cards just yet. On a list of requested site features, Linux support has gotten quite a few votes, but a GOG employee said, "Linux is a great platform, and we love how much passion you guys are showing for it here on our wishlist. ... If we're able to bring GOG.com games to Linux--and we're constantly evaluating ways that we can do this--we want to make sure that we're doing it the GOG.com way: simple, easy, and it 'just works.' I'm not telling you guys to give up hope--we know how much you want this--but what I am saying is that this is harder to support than it might seem initially, and we're not ready to move to support Linux officially just yet."
All right !!
I was under the impression that a lot of the old games are merely dos version packaged with dosbox. I know I use some game I got from GoG under linux, just unpacking it and launching it "by hand".
Am I missing something? I don't see how hard it would be to just package the same thing with a linux version of dosbox...
The pay-what-you-want is actually only for 20 games, and you have to pay more than the average. The 32 games you get for $35. Just pointing that out, still a pretty good deal. Played Castles last night - exactly as I remembered it, incomprehensible. Might have to read the manual to remember how to get my idiots to actually start building; the music transported me directly back to 1991, though. Love that awesome midi sound.
If you want all 32 games you'll have to pay $34.99. Not bad at all, but not "pay what you want." Also seems to me that there were a lot more games from back in the day with the Interplay name on them, not just these 32.
I'm already downloading Mac version of The Witcher: EE.
Yeehaw!
And floundering. Won't somebody please save it!
S O S
It's over-inflated self has burst and it is going down unless YOU help now. Buy Teh Goog. Save it and the internet!
Since Lion onwards OSX PPC support has been dropped as well as the old OS9 and below games. Plenty of games and apps have been lost due to poor emulation. As for Linux don't support Ubuntu because of their Amazon betrayal.
What people in the Linux community tend to forget is there is no such thing as the Linux operating system. There are dozens of operating systems based upon Linux, but there isn't any one Linux platform to target. If GOG rolls out support for, say, Ubuntu, they will have hundreds of Arch users still nagging them for support. If they support Red Hat, they leave Debian out in the cold. It's virtually impossible to support all Linux desktop distributions because there's no lowest common denominator and the various projects are in constant flux.
Does it include Breakout? Super Breakout?
Small company supports obscure operating system.
Stop the presses!
Required reading for internet skeptics
... and you've got my money. Best game ever.
A lot of these games I've already been playing for years on the Mac via DOSBox. Only I'm running OSX 10.4 or 10.5 and GOG requires 10.6.8 or later. What are we paying for again?
Maybe I'm confused but isn't OS X simply Apple's version of Linux? I realize this is a simplistic view but I don't see why they wouldn't be able to create a package for Linux.
If I remember correctly the game engine for the marathon series has already been open sourced and ported to Linux, you can grab the sources code (and precompiled binaries for OSX and Windows) from bungi's websites and the game files are a free download from there along with numerous mods.Sso I'm not sure how much more easily available they could be as for the others I don't know.
---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
You just use statically compiled libraries and for the most part you're good.
Until someone discovers a security vulnerability in zlib, libpng, libjpeg, or one of the other statically linked libraries.
Steam is coming to Linux, for reals this time. GOG can go fsck themselves. Anything they have that I'm even remotely interested in can be brought up in DosBox or WINE.
If they were really interested in a Linux platform, they'd do it. The work to port it to Mac is no more difficult than what's involved to port it to Debian or any other flavor of Linux. When they grow the fsck up and stop playing favorites, we'll talk... until then, I will go right on playing games they want to sell, without any trouble, and without giving them one single red cent.
Every bit of feedback I've ever sent them has gotten implemented. When first using the GOG downloader I sent them feedback that it's annoying I had to queue individual bonus content pieces one at a time. Few months later they updated and now you can add all bonus content for a game in one click. Later I gave the feedback that for any Dosbox based games they should have Mac versions. Lo and behold, today my purchase of Syndicate I can now download for Mac as well.
GOG rules!
but they couldn't do it for Linux. Fuck you, GOG.
thanks for all the fish
Neeraj ripped me of Rs 10,000.
The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
They recompile and issue it along with their standard game patches.
Provided that the product's publisher is still in business and has not yet EOL'd the product.