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you can do what you're asking if I am understanding your post correctly.

simply understand Steam Family Sharing, and you will be able to play games in eachother's library.

that is, you will be able to play a game from his library, and he will be able to play a game from yours at the same time, but you will not be able to play a game from one library or two games from one library at the same time.

games bought on Steam are not transferrable to gog. just as stuff bought at sears cannot be returned at costco.
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mindblast: Now, as for Steam, you can run the same game on two different machines, in the same time, as long as they are DRM-free. If they are not, you can't run two steam clients with same logins in the same time. As for GOG games, practically, you can copy them on more systems.
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PookaMustard: In addition to that, I think that you need to run these DRM-free games through their executables in order to take advantage of their DRM-free nature and play on as many devices as you want, because if you try the regular Steam way, Steam will complain because you're already logged in somewhere else and won't let you continue.

Careful with these DRM-free games though. They may be DRM-free, but they're still bound to Steam's rules and methods of all their games, backups require Steam to work and the works.
Only if you use Steams backup tool. The drm free games on Steam can be backed up manually and works without steam afterwards. They are not really bound to steams 'rules and methods'... if they did they wouldn't not be drm free.... you only need steam as a downloader for the initial download. I think we have been here before?
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amok: Only if you use Steams backup tool. The drm free games on Steam can be backed up manually and works without steam afterwards. They are not really bound to steams 'rules and methods'... if they did they wouldn't not be drm free.... you only need steam as a downloader for the initial download. I think we have been here before?
But again, I can't trust if a game requires some pesky registry entries in order to run firsthand or not, or if some games actually launch without Steam but complain if they don't find it running. Plus the other problem is that you need STEAM to download anything from Steam, unlike GOG where basically you can download with GOG Galaxy, GOG Downloader, regular downloads through a browser or through a download manager, the works.
By the way - http://www.gog.com/forum/general/list_of_steam_games_that_can_be_activated_on_gog
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johnnygoging: you can do what you're asking if I am understanding your post correctly.

simply understand Steam Family Sharing, and you will be able to play games in eachother's library.

that is, you will be able to play a game from his library, and he will be able to play a game from yours at the same time, but you will not be able to play a game from one library or two games from one library at the same time.

games bought on Steam are not transferrable to gog. just as stuff bought at sears cannot be returned at costco.
Prepare to be exfoliated!
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PookaMustard: But again, I can't trust if a game requires some pesky registry entries in order to run firsthand or not
All required registry entries (if any) will be found in installscript.vdf, that is how Steam knows what to add. You will have to do a bit of parsing if you try to add them manually, but it is in a human readable format.

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PookaMustard: Plus the other problem is that you need STEAM to download anything from Steam
SteamCMD. Perfect for downloads on remote boxes.
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swedewolf: Can I move my latest game from steam to galaxy and also if I just use this service in the future can I play one game installed on galaxy and my son play another game on my account on a secondary computer?
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brunosiffredi: Steam has a family system 'thing' that allows you to grant access to your games to other accounts. It's a bit wonky and I've personally had a bad experience trying to get it to work, but it's in there.
And you!
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brunosiffredi: Steam has a family system 'thing' that allows you to grant access to your games to other accounts. It's a bit wonky and I've personally had a bad experience trying to get it to work, but it's in there.
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johnnygoging:
I don't think this would give swedewolf what they are looking for. If I am playing a game from my library, no one else can play a game from my library. I wish it could it would save so much strife. Right now my sons can not play games from my library simultaneously, so its almost as bad as only having one computer if they both want to play games that are only in my library.
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johnnygoging:
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samlii: I don't think this would give swedewolf what they are looking for. If I am playing a game from my library, no one else can play a game from my library. I wish it could it would save so much strife. Right now my sons can not play games from my library simultaneously, so its almost as bad as only having one computer if they both want to play games that are only in my library.
I think with Family Sharing you can play two games from the same library on different PCs at the same time.

Anyway, it is still pretty terrible and in no way does Steam offer the same freedom as pure DRM-free games from GOG, but if swedewolf already owns the games on Steam, I think he should give it a try.
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johnnygoging:
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samlii: I don't think this would give swedewolf what they are looking for. If I am playing a game from my library, no one else can play a game from my library. I wish it could it would save so much strife. Right now my sons can not play games from my library simultaneously, so its almost as bad as only having one computer if they both want to play games that are only in my library.
THat always makes me laugh when people say SFS is designed for a single computer. SO why can you authorise 10 computer.
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samlii: I don't think this would give swedewolf what they are looking for. If I am playing a game from my library, no one else can play a game from my library. I wish it could it would save so much strife. Right now my sons can not play games from my library simultaneously, so its almost as bad as only having one computer if they both want to play games that are only in my library.
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brunosiffredi: I think with Family Sharing you can play two games from the same library on different PCs at the same time.

Anyway, it is still pretty terrible and in no way does Steam offer the same freedom as pure DRM-free games from GOG, but if swedewolf already owns the games on Steam, I think he should give it a try.
The ONLY way to play 2 different games from a library is if one computer has the account in offline mode.

THERE IS NO OTHER WAY.

2 years on and people really don't know how it works.
Post edited November 19, 2015 by mechmouse
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samlii: I don't think this would give swedewolf what they are looking for. If I am playing a game from my library, no one else can play a game from my library. I wish it could it would save so much strife. Right now my sons can not play games from my library simultaneously, so its almost as bad as only having one computer if they both want to play games that are only in my library.
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mechmouse: THat always makes me laugh when people say SFS is designed for a single computer. SO why can you authorise 10 computer.
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brunosiffredi: I think with Family Sharing you can play two games from the same library on different PCs at the same time.

Anyway, it is still pretty terrible and in no way does Steam offer the same freedom as pure DRM-free games from GOG, but if swedewolf already owns the games on Steam, I think he should give it a try.
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mechmouse: The ONLY way to play 2 different games from a library is if one computer has the account in offline mode.

THERE IS NO OTHER WAY.

2 years on and people really don't know how it works.
so bob can't play a game from bill's library at the same time bill is playing a game from bob's library?
I'm amazed... I haven't really looked into SFS but just assumed that a family could theoretically have a single Steam account and share games off of that one single account. So much for convenience.
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mechmouse: The ONLY way to play 2 different games from a library is if one computer has the account in offline mode.

THERE IS NO OTHER WAY.

2 years on and people really don't know how it works.
I'd argue that even the cult of Valve doesn't know how it works as well. They'd brag about how cool it is and forget the one drawback that makes the whole family sharing thingy pointless as hell.
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JMich: All required registry entries (if any) will be found in installscript.vdf, that is how Steam knows what to add. You will have to do a bit of parsing if you try to add them manually, but it is in a human readable format.
The big problem is that its done manually without Steam, and there's that.

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JMich: SteamCMD. Perfect for downloads on remote boxes.
Oh, cool. Lemme check that out.
Post edited November 19, 2015 by PookaMustard
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mechmouse: THat always makes me laugh when people say SFS is designed for a single computer. SO why can you authorise 10 computer.

The ONLY way to play 2 different games from a library is if one computer has the account in offline mode.

THERE IS NO OTHER WAY.

2 years on and people really don't know how it works.
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johnnygoging: so bob can't play a game from bill's library at the same time bill is playing a game from bob's library?
Thats two libraries

I said a library, singular.

Cross sharing can work in a limited fashon. But if you own hl2 you can't use his version while he plays you game.
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JMich: All required registry entries (if any) will be found in installscript.vdf, that is how Steam knows what to add. You will have to do a bit of parsing if you try to add them manually, but it is in a human readable format.
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PookaMustard: The big problem is that its done manually without Steam, and there's that.
Not sure I understand. You mean the problem is that it's not automatic as it is when installing with Steam, or that you actually can do it without using Steam?