MadalinStroe: I 100% agree with this. It's a mistake for GOG to try to compete with STEAM. They should do their own thing, like they did when they started GOG. They should offer complete/definitive versions of the games, DRM-Free. Games getting patched late, or missing features such as modding tools or daily runs, only draws bad publicity.
Personally I think it was more a question of survival than anything else.
It's nice to be in a niche but it only works if your niche is actually... a niche.
What I mean by that is that when Gog started nobody really cared about old games and there was no legal way to get most of them, not to mention that it required works to make them work, so they had this market all for themselves.
But after a couple of years devs discovered that there was a market for their older games and that they could sell said games on Steam directly to reach a much bigger market; that's when we saw more and more older games appearing on Steam.So IMHO Gog had two choices, remain in their old games only niche and gets slowly but surely eaten by Steam or diversify themselves while keeping the DRM-free, something that Steam was not going to copy any time soon.
They chose the later and personally I think it was the right choice, even if it bring with it all sort of troubles (e.g. having to drop the worldwide price, issues some games support, DLCs, etc...)