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Cause there's no business like show-business!

Our DRM-Free approach to digital distribution has been the foundation of GOG.com since day one and we're convinced it is now firmly rooted in the gaming industry landscape. More and more users start to expect and demand the digital content they paid for to be free from any kind of restrictive mechanisms that limit access to their collections and get in the way of enjoyment. We think this is a good time to take the next step in our quest to make digital entertainment better for everyone. Today we set out to spread our DRM-Free ideas across the movie industry! That's right: GOG.com now offers DRM-Free movies.

Our goal is to offer you cinema classics as well as some all-time favorite TV series with no DRM whatsoever, for you to download and keep on your hard drive or stream online whenever you feel like it. We talked to most of the big players in the movie industry and we often got a similar answer: "We love your ideas, but … we do not want to be the first ones. We will gladly follow, but until somebody else does it first, we do not want to take the risk". DRM-Free distribution is not a concept their lawyers would accept without hesitation. We kind of felt that would be the case and that it's gonna take patience and time to do it, to do it, to do it right. That's quite a journey ahead of us, but every gamer knows very well that great adventures start with one small step. So why not start with something that feels very familiar? We offer you a number of gaming and internet culture documentaries - all of them DRM-Free, very reasonably priced, and presenting some fascinating insight into topics close to a gamer's heart. Now, what do we have in store for you?

- There's a whole new Movie Catalog for you to browse!
- All the movies we sell are priced at $5.99 (that's a launch promo price for a few of them), and we aim to have that as the main price point for most of our future releases
- Two of the movies - The Art of Playing and TPB AFK: The Pirate Bay Away From Keyboard are available for FREE, so that you can test our new movie distribution features
- Most of our movies are in Full HD 1080p quality, some in 720p. With those of you with limited bandwidth or download quota in mind, we also supply much lighter 576p versions.
- Apart from downloading your movies you have the option to watch them streaming online, right here on GOG.com
- GOG.com is famous for its bonus goodies - each movie will come with as many of them as we can muster
- You can expect subsequent movie releases each week

That's it. GOG.com Movies is a go, time to get some popcorn!
http://www.gog.com/mix/documentaries_falsely_advertised_as_movies
Do they not move, or are they not pictorial? :-P

(Of course, where I'm from we call them films, regardless of the physical storage medium.)
What's the best video app these days? Should I download WinAMP again? The garbage that comes with Windows 8 works terribly.
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ShadowWulfe: What's the best video app these days? Should I download WinAMP again? The garbage that comes with Windows 8 works terribly.
No, try VLC or mpv. Rarely anything beats these two.

https://videolan.org/vlc/
http://mpv.io
Post edited September 10, 2014 by shmerl
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shmerl:
Thanks! I was trying to view the PirateBay documentary the other night and the GOG thing was just too slow, but W8's default is just so awful.

I feel like I used to use VLC way back in the past but ended up disliking it for some reason or other. Guess there's always room for a second chance.
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TheFrenchMonk: snip
very sorry if this has been asked before, but I did not see a blue response. If I purchase a movie from GOG, will it support 5.1 Sorround (or DTS or whatever sound technology) in our home theater?
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ShadowWulfe: What's the best video app these days? Should I download WinAMP again? The garbage that comes with Windows 8 works terribly.
I use VLC without any issues whatsoever :)

edit: VLC also has excellent support for subtitles as you can easily turn on the subtitles on the fly in any movie that has the subs within :)
Post edited September 11, 2014 by JudasIscariot
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ShadowWulfe: What's the best video app these days? Should I download WinAMP again? The garbage that comes with Windows 8 works terribly.
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shmerl: No, try VLC or mpv. Rarely anything beats these two.
VLC -> so great!
Mpv -> uh, I didn't know it.
Winamp5 -> ooold, but.. I use it because I still need a valid alternative (custom filters-categories, old music formats). VLC seems to have only basic libraries, Itunes is terrible, Foobar and AIMP aren't good enough.
Post edited September 11, 2014 by phaolo
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JudasIscariot: I use VLC without any issues whatsoever :)

edit: VLC also has excellent support for subtitles as you can easily turn on the subtitles on the fly in any movie that has the subs within :)
do you by any chance know the answer to my question above? for me this is a substantial factor on whether or not I will be making future digital movie purchases.
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JudasIscariot: I use VLC without any issues whatsoever :)

edit: VLC also has excellent support for subtitles as you can easily turn on the subtitles on the fly in any movie that has the subs within :)
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damien: do you by any chance know the answer to my question above? for me this is a substantial factor on whether or not I will be making future digital movie purchases.
I don't know myself but I'll pass the question on to our techs :)
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damien: do you by any chance know the answer to my question above? for me this is a substantial factor on whether or not I will be making future digital movie purchases.
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JudasIscariot: I don't know myself but I'll pass the question on to our techs :)
thank you. will wait to hear from you
Some of us have a crash-on-exit bug with VLC 2.1.5, so if you opt for VLC you you might want to use the previous version instead.

https://forum.videolan.org/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=120773
Post edited September 11, 2014 by VanishedOne
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phaolo: Mpv -> uh, I didn't know it.
mpv is a fork of mplayer and mplayer2 (you might have heard of them). mpv is a very powerful tool which can do much more than VLC can and supports even very obscure codecs. It's very useful for media conversion and all kind of related automation tasks. It's not as "user friendly" interface wise as VLC though. It's mostly a console tool.
Post edited September 11, 2014 by shmerl
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phaolo: Mpv -> uh, I didn't know it.
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shmerl: mpv is a fork of mplayer and mplayer2 (you might have heard of them). mpv is a very powerful tool which can do much more than VLC can and supports even very obscure codecs. It's very useful for media conversion and all kind of related automation tasks. It's not as "user friendly" interface wise as VLC though. It's mostly a console tool.
Ok, thanks for the info
I've made up my mind about this topic now.

Please sell DRM free and non regional priced movies, eBooks and comics too,
just please don't add more regional priced or even really DRMed (some consider regional pricing already as DRM-light) stuff.

PS: Thanks for the free TPB-AFK movie, it was very interesting.
Post edited September 13, 2014 by Klumpen0815