-3 points
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Maybe it’s great, but I cant even download the installer on linux.

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16 points

Um, yes, you can actually.

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9 points

Installer file is a direct link to an executable file from their website. They contain the full game inside the installer. There’s no reason you can’t download that on Linux as long as you have internet and a browser.

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5 points

GoG homepage > (your name [drop down menu] when logged in) > “Games” > Click on any game in your collection > Download offline backup game installers

You can download installers for whatever systems the game supports – usually that’s just a Windows .EXE installer (+ several .bin files if the game is large). For games intended to run on Linux w/o WINE, you can select “Linux” from a drop down where it says system and it will give you an .sh file.

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6 points
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If it’s an EXE and you just want extract it you can use https://github.com/dscharrer/innoextract
It supports the special GOG Inno files. And it’s a lot faster than the official installer with less temp files.

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16 points
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Removed by mod
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24 points

Galaxy is a necessary convenience for them to compete with Steam tbh

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-6 points
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Removed by mod
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3 points

They don’t really though. I haven’t been on GoG in a minute, but when I was looking for an offline installer (I think for Cyberpunk?), it was very easy to find it

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7 points
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well they should make it at least slightly usable. people harp on epic launcher when this piece of shit barely functions 20% of the time. if you have a big library, it’s useless.

or it was, I stopped trying to make it with when i realized playnite exists.

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9 points

I have a large GOG library, I no longer use their launcher because I’m on Linux and use heroic. However their launcher always worked fine for me.

I don’t recall ever having an issue. Are you sure there wasn’t something underlying going on with your system?

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1 point

Eh, it’s literally there for games that need online access.

I use it for theme hospital and that’s it. Everything else i standalone

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5 points

I had a situation with The Saboteur.

When installed manually with downloaded installers it had configuration issues, IIRC it was limited to 1280x720 and the in game option to modify it didn’t work.

But when installed with Galaxy it defaulted to 1920x1080 and the in game options worked.

At that point my game was working and I didn’t investigate further so I don’t know if it was downloading different installers, or performing post install tweaks to my game config, but from a functional perspective the game was broken when not using Galaxy. Ideally whatever the “magic” was it should be included in the standalone installers!

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3 points
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Removed by mod
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4 points

Yeah they manage both distribution methods.

I’m just highlighting at least one example where they have regrettably left the standalone as a 2nd class option.

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7 points

Sounds like the work of saboteurs.

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26 points

The existence of GOG and Steam is why gaming is bearable in 2024

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Just make sure you download them and back them up yourself because they certainly can revoke your ability to download them from their servers, is what they are implying here.

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24 points

Well yes, of course. They sell you an installer and it’s on you to download it. That the servers could be turned off at one point in the future because the company doesn’t have money any more should be clear. It’s on you to save the installer on your own hard drive, not the companies!

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76 points

Sure, just like other brick and mortar stores can refuse to give you backups of a DVD you own.

As long as the installer works offline this is just as good. It’s up to you to store it in whichever format you prefer so that you don’t lose it - hard drive, thumb drive, DVD…

If you nuke your computers hard drive with the installers of your games, or you step on your blu rays with games and break them, then you lose access to them. As it’s always been, no matter the format?

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2 points

yeah, keep backups.

i’ve got some a few old games bought on floppies or cds that are knackered now. A few of them i’ve ended up buying again from gog.

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51 points

Yeah, like when you buy a physical copy of a gane, it’s up to you to make sure you keep that copy somewhere you can find it again, assuming it hasn’t started decomposing.

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50 points

Luckily there are some friendly people with eye patches and peglegs on the internet backing them up for you.

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10 points

Good luck finding a semi obscure 15 year old game on the high seas.

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15 points

You might be surprised. Plenty of sites backing up whatever they can. Try archive.org and various abandonware sites.

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2 points

I was looking for one of my favorite games from 1993. Not only is the developers website still up and you can still download the demo version and soundtrack from them, but I found some random guy rewrote the whole game in Javascript with WebGL and it can be played in a browser.

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45 points

“It’s not piracy, it’s federated backups!”

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8 points

I like this. I’m not stealing it, just copying it for personal use.

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2 points

Will they also help during a zombie apocalypse? Asking for a friend…

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5 points
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In case of zombie apocalypse, your best friends will probably be a bicycle (to get away from the zombies in almost any terrain and road condition, not be without industrial fuel the next day, and be able to do needed repairs with rough tools and scraps that can be found), a hunting knife, and maybe a crossbow if you can find one (weapons that can be sharpened and reused, and crossbow allowing random joes to just make piercing sticks (again with scraps that can be found anywhere) that work like an arrow, again weapons that do not depend on industrial infrastructure that will not be available anymore). Games that need electricity would be extremely hard to use, it’s better to buy card decks that have multiple rule sets for different games to play, like french decks and tarot, maybe a tabletop set that also has multiple games.

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7 points

Thor from Pirate Software must be absolutely seething rn

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1 point

why?

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11 points

He hates StopKillingGames, because he thinks it will make bad actors try to ruin devs because he expects people to try to profit from being able to provide game access to players when the devs are out of the picture. So therefore we can’t stop killing games, we need to just let games die and stop feeling entitled to the necessary code to run servers. And besides we need to get comfortable buying games with temporary licensing deals that are more convenient and cheap for the developers so they can not renew them if the game isn’t successful, and if the license runs out then we need to accept that the music or car or whatever legally needs to be removed. And we need to accept that if corporate wants to delete our accounts or sew our mouth to somebody’s ass then that’s just gonna have to happen because it’s what we agreed to. Turns out the man is a business bro shill cunt totally cool with the new bullshit because it’s preferred by the suits.

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7 points

He was strawmaning the stop killing games initiative.

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