• NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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    21 days ago

    Friendly reminder: A “DRM-Free” game is only as preserved as the hard drive space you dedicate to it. If GoG goes down tomorrow then you are looking for torrents, same as everyone else.

    That said: GoG has been doing this basically since year one (I want to say they lost and regained Interplay’s library like five times?). On the one hand, I love that I get that “hey, buy it now or never. Here is a discount code” warning. On the other hand… this feels like I would be calling it out as manipulative FOMO bullshit were it any other company.

    Although… it is a pretty safe bet that MS aren’t interested in going back to GoG until the next time their online ecosystem collapses. So probably a “reasonable” bit of FOMO for those who love the SP campaigns of these games.

    • Don_alForno@feddit.org
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      21 days ago

      A “DRM-Free” game is only as preserved as the hard drive space you dedicate to it.

      You mean, just like any pre digital purchasing game that you own on disks? Or similar to any physical object you ever bought (hard drive space / shelf space), for that matter?

      They’re preserving it as much as they’re able to without being a government funded museum.

      • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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        20 days ago

        They’re preserving it as much as they’re able to

        So we are giving participation awards? GoG use digital preservation as a marketing point. They aren’t doing that. And they are arguably making for a false sense of security (some might go even farther…) when people think that buying a game from a major dev and European publisher is digital preservation.

        How would you feel if Crunchyroll started arguing they were the good guys because they were releasing Witch from Mercury for 100 USD?

        Now for the fun part!

        Or similar to any physical object you ever bought (hard drive space / shelf space), for that matter?

        Yeah. As in it is “preserved” up until someone does a cross country move or merges their life with a partner who doesn’t see why you need to have every single Blizzard Battle Chest on a giant shelf in the living room.

        You mean, just like any pre digital purchasing game that you own on disks?

        Yes. Because bit rot is a thing and people need to be aware of that and actually preserve that data. Hmm, I wonder who could help with that…

        They’re preserving it as much as they’re able to without being a government funded museum.

        Good news. You don’t have to be a government funded museum. In fact, governments are kind of an active threat to these because they are in a REALLY grey area legally. And publishers (like CD Projekt…) tend to go after them both legally and not legally.

        I very much disagree that just having a copy of a game is games preservation but it is part of it. And orgs like The Internet Archive are preserving both the media itself AND the media and culture about said media. And they and their associates put the legwork in to reach out to people who have those big boxes or scratched up discs and preserve things BEFORE it is time to make room for the new baby. And they don’t have fancy deals with publishers to help market for donations. They have to ask.

        So if you actually care about digital preservation? https://archive.org/donate?origin=iawww-TopNavDonateButton

        Whereas, if you just want to spend money and react to FOMO?

        • Don_alForno@feddit.org
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          20 days ago

          So we are giving participation awards?

          Huh?

          Are you blaming them for not preserving things more than actual physical objects that you bought are preserved in your house? The whole root of the matter was people complaining about companies obsoleting or taking away games they paid for. What GOG is doing counters just that. It is now once again in your hands and your hands only to preserve and maintain your property, and if the data gets corrupted, you only have time, physics and yourself to blame.

          I couldn’t care less about anybody creating some kind of eternal video game archive for archaeologists of the post apocalyptic world to find. I care about if I will still be able to play the games I paid money for in 30 years, provided I keep the data and hardware. How would that last part be the store’s responsibility?

    • Glide@lemmy.ca
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      21 days ago

      On the other hand… this feels like I would be calling it out as manipulative FOMO bullshit were it any other company.

      While I hesitate to type this as it might be perceived as viewing a corporation as a friend, the intent matters, and GOG has a different history than the majority of FOMO abusing game companies. Did they identify that this is probably an opportunity to push some sales? Sure, probably. But I am chill permitting them that right when they’re visibly working to remove FOMO as a commercial strategy.

      • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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        21 days ago

        Say it with me kids: Corporations are NEVER your friends. At best you have mutual interests, for a time.

        Just look back to everyone who was all in on Google because “Do no evil” and “They aren’t Apple” and so forth. Unity when they were the underdog relative to Unreal. Reddit when they were the “counter culture” social media. And so forth.

        I like GoG a lot and have since they first launched. I also remember the French Monk Incident and so forth.

        • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          20 days ago

          This is true. But things aren’t black and white, there are degrees. For example, there is a big difference between private corporations, and publicly listed ones. The former at least allows for possible decency. Sometimes. Usually not.

        • cmhe@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          The underdog is often the one that is most pro-consumer, since that is in their business interest. As soon as the take the lead, the doors to enshittyfication open, because business shifts from getting new customers to not letting them leave. (Of course there are exceptions, but this is the case broadly)