Neobr10: So if i put myself into a murderers shoes ill understand his point? Wrong things are wrong no matter how.
That is so intellectually dishonest I accidentally discarded my actual reply to object ASAP. Roll call!
Red herring.
Guilt by association.
Appeal to tradition.
Appeal to authority.
Appeal to popular belief.
Slippery slope.
Suppressed evidence.
Wow.
Wrong things are wrong because we have factual evidence that they harm society. We know that sexing up kids is wrong because it hurts kids, and a psychiatrist can comprehensively show you why. Now show me on this doll where piracy has touched you.
A damn lot of actually wrong things hadn't been "considered wrong" - that it, illegal - in the so-called civilized world until very recently, and a damn lot of wrong things are still considered okay, and vice versa. Faith healing is legal. Homeopathy is legal. Corporal punishment is legal. It even gets worse: Russian legislators want to jail people for "homosexual propaganda" among minors, and yes this does include being around your own kids if you happen to be gay, and they are using the same rhetoric: "You are supporting gays, so obviously you must support pedos too, shut up pedo freak, we are protecting children from pervs like you".
I hate stepping in dog shit as much as anyone, but while I do refer to the shit as "landmines", I do not equate it with actual war crime.
TL;DR: piracy might not be legal today, but see you in 20 years when Sweden makes piracy legal (and I apply for asylum there as a lesbian mother, see above) while US turns into the Republic of Gilead and bans videogames.
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Now, whatever my original post was about....
1. It should be GOG, not GoG.
2. All games on GOG are Windows games. The installer won't run under DOS. SO whoever filed those torrents needs to correct it.
And on a serious note, there are 10000 people lining up to buy Grim Fandango, a game one can start downloading in 0.15 seconds.
SWorD84: Tons of psychological studies disagree with you. There's a lot of great reading out there on the subject. Enjoy. :-)
You probably have read/heard/watched more videogame reviews than you have played videogames. (That's true for me by two orders of magnitude. First thing I did after winning my first game was write a comprehensive walkthrough for it. The game was 10 years old and so was I.) Then there are tips/hints/walkthroughs/plot discussions/fanworks/LPs/trolling on top of that. Note that I'm pretty generous on the "review" term but do not count facebook games. Here's your social aspect.