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We would like to inform you that, due to our storage and CDN provider's outage, we are encountering technical issues that may cause difficulties in downloading and updating your games both through the GOG GALAXY client and GOG Store. Already downloaded files are in no way affected.

We are trying to mitigate this external problem by switching to our secondary storage while our provider is restoring data. We would also like to highlight that those issues do not affect purchasing games. Currently available discounts on selected titles will not be extended due to the above.

It is our team's top priority to resolve those issues and we aim to resolve them as fast as possible. Apologies for any inconveniences caused.
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mrkgnao: That's mostly a myth. I have my entire (relatively small) steam library backed up on an external drive, all 160+ games playable completely offline without the steam client (which I have never installed). It is in much the same situation as my GOG library (except my GOG library is much larger). I also have 1 epic game in the same condition (I don't really use the epic store, but I got one game I was interested in from them).
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Syphon72: Come on, you know that's not really a myth. Don't you Crack a lot of your Steam games? I know for a fact most my Steam games would be unplayable if this happened. Because even that .dll or other program will not work on most games.

Trust me, I have more Steam games than you and did a lot of testing.
It's really depends on the game. But Steam DRM is really really easy to remove, which is what most games have. Very few have third party DRM or Denuvo and they aren't coming here anyway except for the very few rare cases where the game release here but the denvuo was never removed on Steam. At-least with Steam you have up to date games and DLC.
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mrkgnao: By selectively buying only steam games that are DRM-free (or easily DRM-freeable), of which there are many thousands, if not tens of thousands, it is possible to use steam as a mostly DRM-free platform with an optional client, just like GOG, which is what I do. There are drawbacks to that approach, for example it requires more research and more work to maintain such a library. There are also benefits, for example it is much more likely that one's games will be up-to-date, and, in the long run, cheaper, due to numerous key reseller bundles.
You are 100% correct. Most games on Steam use Steam DRM so are easily DRM-freeable and Steam includes the benefit up to date DLC and games.
Post edited July 22, 2023 by BKGaming
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BKGaming:
Whoa. Haven't seen you around for a while, if I'm not mistaken? Welcome back.
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BKGaming:
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mrkgnao: Whoa. Haven't seen you around for a while, if I'm not mistaken? Welcome back.
Yea I lurk from time to time but I'm not around that much anymore. I use Steam mostly now that I own a Steam Deck and got tired of double dipping on games. So GOG is more of rare buy for me these days.
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BKGaming: It's really depends on the game. But Steam DRM is really really easy to remove, which is what most games have. Very few have third party DRM or Denuvo and they aren't coming here anyway except for the very few rare cases where the game release here but the denvuo was never removed on Steam. At-least with Steam you have up to date games and DLC.
See. That bothers me. Its like a lot of open-source tools where they say: "It's really easy to operate, but you got to be mindful of this and that" and then nobody wants to do it (even if the tool is really powerful and free like beer and speech). They just end up going with a managed equivalent in the cloud rather than doing the last 10%.

It's exactly the same for this. I guarantee you that less than 5% of Steam's user-base will bother with all those workarounds, because that's exactly what they are, workarounds. Fewer people than you'd like to believe have the stomach for those kinds of things.

The sad reality is that when Steam goes bust (and it might be after GOG, but I guarantee you they eventually will), the overwelming majority of their use-base will lose their entire collection (which they purchased like it was ownership, not rental like Netflix and Steam definitely profits from it like if it was ownership) and that's just wrong.

I'm very honest by nature and I will never, ever, endorse such a deceptive way to do things with my money. But you do you and I'll do me.
Post edited July 22, 2023 by Magnitus
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Magnitus: See. That bothers me. Its like a lot of open-source tools where they say: "It's really easy to operate, but you got to be mindful of this and that" and then nobody wants to do it. They just end up going with a managed equivalent in the cloud rather than doing the last 10%, seriously.

It's exactly the same for this. I guarantee you that less than 5% of Steam's user-base will bother with all those workarounds, because that's exactly what they are, workarounds.
It's not as straightforward as a GOG installer, but it's not super complicated either. Steam usually tells you if the game has some kind of DRM other then Steam DRM. So usually, you will know before buy. And there are very easy ways to remove Steam DRM if the game comes with that (which is most). So essentially after that is done you simply need to make sure the redistributables are installed (easy enough as these are included in the game folder usually and steam has an install script you can look at to see what it was installing).
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Magnitus: The sad reality is that when Steam goes bust (and it might be after GOG, but I guarantee you they eventually will), the overwelming majority of their use-base will lose their entire collection (which they purchased like it was ownership, not rental like Netflix and Steam definitely profits from it like if it was ownership) and that's just wrong.

I'm very honest by nature and I will never, ever, endorse such a deceptive way to do things with my money. But you do you and I'll do me.
I'm just saying what is possible. What people do or don't want to do is up to them. As I agree most probably won't bother, but that's not my problem. I'm just concerned with what I buy and what I can realistically preserve if something happens to Steam vs the benefits of using Steam over GOG for most purchases.
Post edited July 22, 2023 by BKGaming
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Syphon72: Come on, you know that's not really a myth. Don't you Crack a lot of your Steam games? I know for a fact most my Steam games would be unplayable if this happened. Because even that .dll or other program will not work on most games.

Trust me, I have more Steam games than you and did a lot of testing.
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BKGaming: It's really depends on the game. But Steam DRM is really really easy to remove, which is what most games have. Very few have third party DRM or Denuvo and they aren't coming here anyway except for the very few rare cases where the game release here but the denvuo was never removed on Steam. At-least with Steam you have up to date games.
I point out Goldberg and steamless doesn't work on lot of games. It's easy but dose not always work. I have about 500 games, and goldberg and steamless didn't work on a lot of them.
Post edited July 22, 2023 by Syphon72
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BKGaming: It's not as straightforward as a GOG installer, but it's not super complicated either. Steam usually tells you if the game has some kind of DRM other then Steam DRM. So usually, you will know before buy. And there are very easy ways to remove Steam DRM if the game comes with that (which is most). So essentially after that is done you simply need to make sure the redistributables are installed (easy enough as these are included in the game folder usually and steam has an install script you can look at to see what it was installing).
You might claim it is simple, but I'd still wager with a gun pointed to my head that less than 5% of Steam's use base is doing it, especially if the bar is to do it consistently for a large portion of their collection.

I read what mrkgnao posted about it diagonally in the past and its geeky territory. In my personaly experience dealing with developers (which tend to be a lot more tech savvy than your average everyday user), most people won't have the stomach for it.

And btw, that's why I also harped on GOG in the past for not making the process of backing up your collection simpler. The browser experience is ok when you have a small collection, but it doesn't scale well. If they were serious about their mendate to "make games last forever", they'd make backing up your collection a lot more user-friendly than it is right now (especially when your collection is large).
Post edited July 22, 2023 by Magnitus
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BKGaming: It's really depends on the game. But Steam DRM is really really easy to remove, which is what most games have. Very few have third party DRM or Denuvo and they aren't coming here anyway except for the very few rare cases where the game release here but the denvuo was never removed on Steam. At-least with Steam you have up to date games and DLC.
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Magnitus: See. That bothers me. Its like a lot of open-source tools where they say: "It's really easy to operate, but you got to be mindful of this and that" and then nobody wants to do it (even if the tool is really powerful and free like beer and speech). They just end up going with a managed equivalent in the cloud rather than doing the last 10%.

It's exactly the same for this. I guarantee you that less than 5% of Steam's user-base will bother with all those workarounds, because that's exactly what they are, workarounds. Fewer people than you'd like to believe have the stomach for those kinds of things.

The sad reality is that when Steam goes bust (and it might be after GOG, but I guarantee you they eventually will), the overwelming majority of their use-base will lose their entire collection (which they purchased like it was ownership, not rental like Netflix and Steam definitely profits from it like if it was ownership) and that's just wrong.

I'm very honest by nature and I will never, ever, endorse such a deceptive way to do things with my money. But you do you and I'll do me.
Agreed.

The sad reality is that the same is more and more true of much of GOG's user base too. Especially since the advent of galaxy has obviated the need to download those "backup" (synonym: "workaround") offline installers. Many newcomers to GOG don't even know what offline installers are.

Talking about deceptive practices, that is exactly what the big blue "download and install now" button vs. the hidden "offline backup game installer" link in each of our library game panels is.
Post edited July 22, 2023 by mrkgnao
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BKGaming: It's really depends on the game. But Steam DRM is really really easy to remove, which is what most games have. Very few have third party DRM or Denuvo and they aren't coming here anyway except for the very few rare cases where the game release here but the denvuo was never removed on Steam. At-least with Steam you have up to date games.
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Syphon72: I point out Goldberg doesn't work on lot of games. It's easy but dose not always work. I have about 500 games, and goldberg and steamless didn't work on a lot of them.
There are much better ways/ tools but of course saying anymore would go against the forum rules.
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Syphon72: I point out Goldberg doesn't work on lot of games. It's easy but dose not always work. I have about 500 games, and goldberg and steamless didn't work on a lot of them.
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BKGaming: There are much better ways/ tools but of course saying anymore would go against the forum rules.
Trust me I know about those tools. But at that point why even buy from steam if you want DRM free games. People wonder why things will not get better. Haha
Post edited July 22, 2023 by Syphon72
Nevermind.
Post edited July 22, 2023 by foad01
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BKGaming: There are much better ways/ tools but of course saying anymore would go against the forum rules.
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Syphon72: Trust me I know about those tools. But at that point why even buy from steam if you want DRM free games. People wonder why things will not get better. Haha
Up to date gmaes, all DLC, and of course some games may never come here. I'd never advocate for sharing games or anything like that. I just like to keep up way to preserve games if or when I need to too. Right now, Steam is a live and well and I don't need too.

I just need my games to last until I die, after that I don't care....
Post edited July 22, 2023 by BKGaming
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Syphon72: Trust me I know about those tools. But at that point why even buy from steam if you want DRM free games. People wonder why things will not get better. Haha
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BKGaming: Up to date gmaes, all DLC, and of course some games may never come here. I'd never advocate for sharing games or anything like that. I just like to keep up way to preserve games if or when I need to too. Right now, Steam is a live and well and I don't need too.

I just need my games to last until I die, after that I don't care....
That's not what I mean, when I said why even buy from steam.
I can agree with you about the dying part. Lol.
Post edited July 22, 2023 by Syphon72
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BKGaming: Up to date gmaes, all DLC, and of course some games may never come here. I'd never advocate for sharing games or anything like that. I just like to keep up way to preserve games if or when I need to too. Right now, Steam is a live and well and I don't need too.

I just need my games to last until I die, after that I don't care....
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Syphon72: That's not what I mean, when said why even buy from steam.
Because I want to support developers and publishers and the creation of future games?
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Syphon72: That's not what I mean, when said why even buy from steam.
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BKGaming: Because I want to support developers and publishers and the creation of future games?
Well that's good. Not like DRM going to get any better.