HKayn: GTTOD: Get To The Orange Door is being delisted from GOG because the developers of the game hated working with the store. One developer said as much on the studio's Discord server, see my screenshots of their messages.
It's gotten to the point where GOG needs to finally take a hint about their terrible and dated developer experience when compared to the current leading PC game distribution platform. From the inconsistent curation process that is frustrating smaller developers by wasting their time, to the complete lack of self-service tools for managing your game listing.
GOG is losing indie developers by the day. Sequels to games such as Darkest Dungeon and Redout are not being released on GOG. If this store does not fix its reputation and get with the times concerning their developer experience, I don't see ourselves being able to purchase modern indie titles on here for much longer.
I was feeling sympathetic by reading this, but after I saw the attachment, I don't think I have much sympathy left. Many GOG users are here because they like to OWN games rather than rent them, and that person from your screenshots clearly has no grasp of this concept. Yes, GOG has issues, plenty of them, but none of them are enough to claim that it should cease existing.
Son_Ovagun: Howdy everyone, I thought i'd help ease things on whats happening with orange door, both as dev tester and supporter, and friend of Andrew.
Q: Why is the game being delisted from GOG?
A: It's been said on the record that, quote "GOG is a hassle to push updates for, theres little to no communication, no workshop support for modding in the future and generally not a good enviroment for a game still in early access". It was also initially not even added onto GOG by him, but by his publishers.
Why is the Steam Workshop being regarded as something that makes or breaks mods? People have been modding games for DECADES without it. Did Nexus and all the other modding sites stop existing? Can we no longer dump some files in the game's directory using File Explorer? Some may prefer the Steam Workshop for the "convenience", but that is in no way a requirement for mods.
I, personally, do not use the Steam Workshop, even if I own the game on Steam and the workshop is available. Just like with the main game, if I like some mod, I prefer to keep a copy of it myself, in case it gets delisted or whatever. Manual mods also come with instructions that educate me about how the mod is installed and loaded, rather than me having to scratch my head trying to figure out what the heck did Steam just do under the hood, in case I want to extract that mod for safe keeping.
There have been countless examples that have shown that no digital library is safe, not even Steam. The only library I can trust is my own hard drive.
Son_Ovagun: Q: Am I being scammed? Whats going to happen with my copy?
A: If you have a copy of orange door on GOG, you are entitled to a free steam key, simply contact either Andrew#3004 or any of the moderators in the discord.
That is nice of them.
Son_Ovagun: Even though he's probably reading the fourms right now, if you recommend any DRM-free alternatives, let me know and I'll see what he thinks about them!
I appreciate that GOG can be really annoying to deal with, but the DRM-Free format is too important to let the issues with GOG stand in the way. There are plenty of alternative store fronts for DRM-Free content. The second largest one after GOG being the one that shares a name with a certain virtual conferencing app. I'm worries that GOG may delete my post if I get any more specific.