“Steam is winning with its ease of use,” he says. “In that regard, I think much can be done in GOG without losing its core values and the way it operates in general.”
Yeah, not really. Ease of use is part of it but I would argue GoG is equally easy. Steam also has a breadth of features for users.
More importantly, as it pertains to GoG, Steam allows DRM.
This is a fundamental problem for GoG. Publishers want DRM. Consumers largely don’t care. For that reason, Steam has a much larger library, especially for big AAA titles. Every game that’s on GoG is also on Steam. They’ll always be the little guy catering to a niche market of consumers who demand DRM-free games. Get rid of that and we can start talking about ease of use and features.
Obviously, that’s not what I want, but if they want to compete with Steam, it’s what they’ll have to do.
You’re right that the AAA will be published on Steam first. And since people want to have all the games in one store, they will buy indie/AA/old games on Steam instead of Gog even if those titles exists on Gog.
But I still think it is better for Gog to stick with the DRM-free niche, people will not move away from Steam anyway as we have seen with Epic store.
Not talking about what’s better, just what will happen.
What’s better is if we all refused to accept DRM and then would have no choice but to sell without it.
I bought this game recently that had always-online DRM so I couldn’t play it at work so I returned it and then pirated it with the DRM removed LOL. It was not for sale on GOG.
I agree that a boycott of games with DRM would be the best option but it is impossible to convince a majority to refuse DRM. People wants to play the latest and coolest games more than they care about the DRM.
I don’t think Gog will grow faster or more even if they accept DRM, simply because most gamers already have a majority of their games at Steam and want to keep all games in one store. So they will not move to Gog anyway. And then Gog will remain as a small company and we will lose the DRM-free store.
I agree with you on it needs more than just ease of use, other comments talk about these other features more.
I disagree on the DRM portion, just as much as I don’t think kernel level anti-cheat has any place on Linux. If publishers want that, they can limit themselves to other systems/stores. The main reason I use GOG is I know every game is DRM free, I just wish it had some of the other good stuff Steam has.
We weren’t talking about Linux and we weren’t talking about your personal preferences. We were talking about the success of GoG, and competing with Steam.
If publishers want that, they can limit themselves to other systems/stores.
Yeah, not really. Ease of use is part of it but I would argue GoG is equally easy. Steam also has a breadth of features for users.
More importantly, as it pertains to GoG, Steam allows DRM.
This is a fundamental problem for GoG. Publishers want DRM. Consumers largely don’t care. For that reason, Steam has a much larger library, especially for big AAA titles. Every game that’s on GoG is also on Steam. They’ll always be the little guy catering to a niche market of consumers who demand DRM-free games. Get rid of that and we can start talking about ease of use and features.
Obviously, that’s not what I want, but if they want to compete with Steam, it’s what they’ll have to do.
You’re right that the AAA will be published on Steam first. And since people want to have all the games in one store, they will buy indie/AA/old games on Steam instead of Gog even if those titles exists on Gog.
But I still think it is better for Gog to stick with the DRM-free niche, people will not move away from Steam anyway as we have seen with Epic store.
Not talking about what’s better, just what will happen.
What’s better is if we all refused to accept DRM and then would have no choice but to sell without it.
I bought this game recently that had always-online DRM so I couldn’t play it at work so I returned it and then pirated it with the DRM removed LOL. It was not for sale on GOG.
I agree that a boycott of games with DRM would be the best option but it is impossible to convince a majority to refuse DRM. People wants to play the latest and coolest games more than they care about the DRM.
I don’t think Gog will grow faster or more even if they accept DRM, simply because most gamers already have a majority of their games at Steam and want to keep all games in one store. So they will not move to Gog anyway. And then Gog will remain as a small company and we will lose the DRM-free store.
I agree with you on it needs more than just ease of use, other comments talk about these other features more.
I disagree on the DRM portion, just as much as I don’t think kernel level anti-cheat has any place on Linux. If publishers want that, they can limit themselves to other systems/stores. The main reason I use GOG is I know every game is DRM free, I just wish it had some of the other good stuff Steam has.
We weren’t talking about Linux and we weren’t talking about your personal preferences. We were talking about the success of GoG, and competing with Steam.
They will. And they do. That’s the point.