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Through the years, as GOG evolved, we explored many directions, and developed in ways that supported the needs presented by them. As mentioned in the first 2022 update, one of the things we’d like to do this year is to come back to our classic games roots, with the knowledge and experience that we gained during GOG’s existence.

Originally, GOG stood for Good Old Games. The idea for the company was born from the wish to play older games in a legal and easy-to-use way. As the classic games hold a special place in our heart, we’d like to devote more attention to highlighting them. It means that our goal is for GOG to become, once again, the best place for the classic PC games.

Our job isn’t to simply release the games that are already on the market. It’s to make them available to everyone - that oftentimes means fixing them, and making sure that they will run on the modern systems that you have. So far we achieved that by our internal work, and various cooperations with DOSBox or ScummVM, among others. Did you know there are a few titles on GOG that the DOSBox crew prepared special, dedicated versions of their great software? Our efforts to bring back some of the beloved games go beyond technical fixes.



In some cases, we also have to solve various legal contrivances to be able to release the games, as some of the rights and ownerships have been lost to time. Some of the titles that can be enjoyed thanks to these efforts are: Diablo + Hellfire, Theme Hospital, Dungeon Keeper Gold™, Deus Ex™ GOTY Edition, System Shock: Enhanced Edition, and of course the main star of today - The Wheel of Time, to which we added modern OS compatibility and hi-res support.

To help those classic games shine again, and get discovered by more people, we also do our best to support our releases with initiatives like Throwback Thursday, interviews with developers and other ways to look behind the scenes. If you like to collect the extra goodies connected to the games, such as guidebooks, wallpapers, concept arts and much more, there is a good chance that some of the ones you’ve gotten on GOG are thanks to our cooperation with The Video Game History Foundation.

But you know most of this already – so what’s next?! The newest development in the area of classics’ visibility and discoverability is the revival of Good Old Games concept. We’re starting with adding the “Good Old Game” tag, which will showcase over 500 games that our Team has deemed iconic classics – games that are older than 10 years and are critically acclaimed, stand the test of time, defined certain mechanics, or simply created new genres. You’ll find there games like Bioshock, Baldur’s Gate, Fallout or Gothic. Of course, this is in part our subjective choice, but we hope to inspire you to check them out for yourselves, have fun with them, and see if you agree with our assessment.



Why did we decide to pivot in this direction? Because we believe that celebrating and preserving classic games is important. They have the power to connect generations. They have the power to evoke nostalgia. They have the power to teach us about what came before and shaped the games we enjoy today. And they deserve to be remembered, and available for everyone to enjoy.

This is just another step to give Good Old Games a well-deserved spot on GOG. The invitation is here and it’s waiting for you! Rediscover with us the games that have been universally loved or search for hidden gems that didn’t get their time in the spotlight. Whatever you choose, we commit to bringing you the best classics experience out there: playable offline, compatible with new OSs, packed with additional digital goodies, and with the ability to back up anywhere at any time to ensure that the games we offer are playable for years to come.
Like most I applaud the recommitment to old classics. But I'm thinking 10 years old isn't old enough to be considered old - I'd suggest making that GOG tag for 20 years or older and critically acclaimed.
I support this. ❤️
I say "yes" to this :) That's the reason I loved the store in the first place - to be able to play (again) the classics.
This is good to hear.

I remember submitting my email hoping to get in on the ground floor when this site went live just so I could grab the Fallout games. I couldn't find them anywhere else. The very first day I had access to the site I bought them. Coincidentally the first digital games I ever purchased. Since then I have been purchasing virtually all of my digital games here.

Though I do love modern, DRM free games I'll always love the games of yore. I believe GOG has always been the best place where both can be found.

Thanks for this update and keep up the great work.
Post edited April 07, 2022 by whodares2
A much more positive update than the last one, IMO - though it’s scary to me to see games like Dragon Age: Origins tagged as ‘old’ games… Anyway, I hope you won’t give up on the newer releases, but it’s very nice to see GOG respecting its roots.
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GOG.com: Originally, GOG stood for Good Old Games. The idea for the company was born from the wish to play older games in a legal and easy-to-use way. As the classic games hold a special place in our heart, we’d like to devote more attention to highlighting them. It means that our goal is for GOG to become, once again, the best place for the classic PC games.
As someone who has been with GOG since the very beginning, I appreciate this re-direction towards the classics, and I hope GOG can continue successfully down this path. Hopefully some of those old games off the community wish list can be secured and updated to play on modern machines.
Great to hear that old games still gonna be a thing in GOG developement. Despite all the good work that was done there are tons of titles to restore to the public! :)
low rated
Going through the list, it seems they just slap the tag "Good old game" on anything that is simply, well, old. That's it, no logic behind this list, no "good old games" list that actually makes sense.

I mean Escape from Monkey Island? Lula the Sexy Empire? M&M9? Silent Hill 4? Stars Wars EP1 Racer? Ishar? Deus Ex 2? All critically panned (or at best, rated mediocre) games that should be long forgotten. Nothing good about that.

Wasn't it "We curate our store, we only deliver the real classics that stood the test of time, classics worth playing" and all that? In what Hell is crap like Lands of Lore 3 considered a good old game still worth playing?

Are there really people who buy for old junk? Do these people even play those games or is it "i bought it for the lulz"?
I love GOG since day one but this is much needed...seems like a lot of classic games are still out there, waiting to be rediscovered...for me, that would be:

Darkseed 1 and 2
Stupid Invaders
Laurie Anderson's Puppet Motel
Star Trek DS9: The Fallen and Harbinger
Star Trek - A Final Unity
Dungeon Master 1 and 2
Aliens Vs. Predator 2 (original)

Just to name a few...
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ShadowAngel.207: Going through the list, it seems they just slap the tag "Good old game" on anything that is simply, well, old. That's it, no logic behind this list, no "good old games" list that actually makes sense.

I mean Escape from Monkey Island? Lula the Sexy Empire? M&M9? Silent Hill 4? Stars Wars EP1 Racer? Ishar? Deus Ex 2? All critically panned (or at best, rated mediocre) games that should be long forgotten. Nothing good about that.

Wasn't it "We curate our store, we only deliver the real classics that stood the test of time, classics worth playing" and all that? In what Hell is crap like Lands of Lore 3 considered a good old game still worth playing?

Are there really people who buy for old junk? Do these people even play those games or is it "i bought it for the lulz"?
Good Old Game tag: 468 titles
Games released no later than in 2012: 1309 titles
Quite a lot of Bad Old Games, or at least YMMV Old Games, there I'd say :))
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GOG.com: ...
Just thinking: depending on how big-name companies will cooperate in the near future, if said companies won't let you (GOG) have at their other old games (like remaining old games that EA, Ubi, etc. have), perhaps there are beloved Good Old indies not yet here that GOG could invest in fixing up (Cthulhu Saves the World, Dungeons of Dredmor - I don't know if those really have compatibility issues, just examples of good old indies). If the GOG fixed-up versions end up on Steam (if GOG can't negotiate perma exclusivity), can you negotiate the right to call the game "x: GOG Edition"? (I'm just thinking seeing the name "GOG" even on Steam might help introduce people to this service.) If that's a stretch maybe you can at least require GOG to be mentioned in the description on Steam - "Made compatible with modern computers by GOG.com"
Post edited April 08, 2022 by tfishell
Well where to begin GOG? Because this is my list:

Age of Empires + The Rise of Rome
Age of Empires 2 The Age of Kings + Conquerors
Age of Empires 3 + The Warchiefs + The Asian Dynasties
Alpha Protocal
Battlefield 1942 + The Road to Rome + Secret Weapons of WW2
Batllefield Vietnam
Battlefield 2 + Special Forces + Euro Force + Armored Fury
Battlefield 2142 + Northern Strike
Black and White 1 + Creature Isle
Black and White 2 + Battle of the Gods
Call of Duty 1 + United Offensive
Civilization 1
Civlization 2 + Conflicts + Fantastic Worlds
Chronicles of Riddick: Assault on Dark Athena
Command & Conquer 1 + The Coverty Operations
Command & Conquer Red Alert + Counterstrike + The Aftermath + Retaialtion
Command & Conquer Tibirian Sun + Firestorm
Command & Conquer Red Alert 2 + Yuri's Revenge
Command & Conquer: Renegade
Condemned: Criminal Origins
Dark Messiah of Might and Magic
Diablo 2 + Lords of Destruction
Duke Nukem 1
Duke Nukem 2
Duke Nukem 3D Atomic Edition
Fable: The Lost Chapters
Heretic II
Marathon
Marathon Durandal
Marathon Infinity
Mechwarrior 1
Mechwarrior 2 + Mercenaries
Mechwarrior 3 + Pirate's Moon
Mechwarrior 4 + Black Knight + Mercenaries.
Neverwinter Nights 1991 Offline Version
No One Lives Forever 1: The Operative
No One Lives Forever 2: A Spy in H.A.R.M.'s Way
Powermonger
Prey 2006
Rise of Nations Extended Edition
SimCity 1
Shadowcaster
Starcraft 1 + Brood War
The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim + Dawnguard + Hearthfire + Dragonborn
The Sims 1 + Livin' Large + House Party + Hot Date + Vacation + Unleashed + Superstar + Makin' Magic + Stuff Packs
The Sims 2 + University + Nightlife + Open for Business + Pets+ Seasons + Bon Voyage + FreeTime + Apartment Life + All Stuff Packs
Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Rogue Spear + Urban Operations + Covert Ops Essentials + Black Thorn + Take Down - Missions in Korea
Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six 3 Raven Shield + Athena Sword + Iron Wrath
Tom Clacny's Splineter Cell Pandora Tomorrow
Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell Chaos Theory
Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell Double Agent
Total War Shogun 1 + Mongol Invasion
Total War Medieval 1 + Viking Invasion
Total War Rome 1 + Barbarian Invasion + Alexander
Total War Medieval 2 + Kingdoms
Turok 3: Shadows of Oblivion PC port by Night Dive
Wizardry I: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord
Wizardry II: The Knight of Diamonds
Wizardry III: Legacy of Llylgamyn
Wizardry IV: The Return of Werdna
Wizardry V: Heart of the Maelstrom
Warcraft III Reign of Chaos + Frozen Throne
Warhammer 40,000 Dawn of War 1 + Winter Warfare + Dark Crusade + Soulstorm
For sure, playing my wonderful Gog original copy of Baldur's Gate 2.
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Dave3d: Lots and lots and lots of good ideas from users here.
Here is another: Make a tag for truly drm free games, a tag for Galaxy only games, and a tag for DRM'ed games.
Truly, going after old classics is great to hear, and I dont think they have to be OLD to be great, but DRM free and working on old OS'es (xp, win7, 8.1) and New OS'es (10, 11) would be wise also. You cant just cut out XP or Win7 because MS doesnt support them anymore. Most users have those OS'es on an old computer, not hooked to internet anyway, and taking away our choice to MAKE us use win 10 and up is not a good decision for drm free gaming.
I totally agree with you .When I change my OS it's because my computer can no longer be upgraded. I still have working windows 3.1 computers. Before they changed the recycling laws I would go out every garbage day and pick up old computers. I still have 5.25 inch floppy's in their original cellophane wrappers.
All of that sounds great to me! I love both old and new games so as long as you guys don't abandon the new games, I'm more than happy to see a renewed focus on bringing lost classics to the market!

*cough* SHANNARA *cough*