by Zancarius » Sat May 23, 2015 9:32 am
One of the things I've always appreciated about GOG is their lack of DRM (and removing DRM from their own titles). They were also one of the first who pushed for Linux support, which I suspect might've been due to their origins as a company selling old DOS titles which required some degree of cross-platform support (and an emulator--DOSBox). That they managed to secure licenses for ancient games most people probably wouldn't remember was just icing on the cake.
It's tough to argue against DRM when you're dealing with bean counters, but GOG seems to do quite well. I think at least part of the problem with piracy is a) cost ("holy crap, $60 for this?"), b) crap titles (e.g. "I'm not paying for that at any price point"), or c) annoying copy protection. I can't tell you how many times I've bought a game, gotten fed up with the CD/DVD-check, dug up a no-disc crack, and merrily went about my way. IMO, "piracy" like that adds value in the form of convenience. Those companies selling on GOG have finally figured it out.
(Side note: Laminar Research, the makers of X-Plane, will happily give you a no-CD fix if you're willing to pay another $50-60 on top of the original $80 purchase to buy a license key in the form of a USB dongle. For private use, I think that's outrageous. Also why I doubt I'll be buying anything from them in the future, just on principle.)
I gave that lich a phylactery shard. Liches love phylactery shards.