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Entering a new year is like leveling up in a game – new adventures and challenges await, which you approach with all previously gained skills. This is a moment that drives us, and today we’d like to give you a general overview of what is to come this year on GOG, but without spoilers – no one likes those.

2021 went with many exciting activities on GOG as well as – let’s be open about it – with some hard knocks. All of those events allow us to gain more experience, learn from our successes and mistakes and grow in our constant pursuit of delivering you the best gamer-centric platform – with a selection of exceptional games, from timeless classics to new releases, and respect for ownership. This approach won’t change this year either, and we’d like to let you know about two areas that we’re putting in the spotlight in 2022.

Let’s start with the platform experience. This is a big one, as we want you to have the best experience when buying the game of your choosing, browsing the catalog, checking the best deals and new releases, finding hidden gems, or discovering that next game to play! There is a lot we can improve here – we know – and this year our development teams’ pipelines are full of projects we hope you’ll enjoy. While we won’t be sharing the exact features just yet, we want to highlight the few that have already been released and are available on GOG, which should give you a good sense of things to come.

First and foremost is the new and improved catalog that has recently gone live to all users. It brings you a new way to carry out more customized searches, sort and filter games by price and release date range, genres, and tags. With your help, we were able to first test the new catalog by slowly rolling it out to more users, monitoring its performance, and gathering initial feedback. Judging by some of your comments, we can already see you appreciate the ease of navigating the offer, especially during bigger sales, and how fast the catalog works – thanks! Our devs are planning further improvements like expanding the tags system – adding new ones, improving filtering, or giving an option to exclude tags from results. Oh, and one more thing – we've heard you were missing the "all-time bestsellers" sorting option. Well, it's back!



Secondly, we want to keep on improving your experience with GOG GALAXY. The client remains an important part of our platform and offers a unique way of interacting with GOG, if you decide to use it. Our approach right now focuses on making the main view in GOG GALAXY more dynamic and live – one way to do it is to show what cool stuff is happening on the platform, something you may have noticed during the Winter Sale when we highlighted the event and the giveaways. In the coming weeks, we will be testing some more changes in the client, so if you’d like to see them first, make sure to toggle the “Experimental features and updates” option in the settings.

And since we’re on the topic of testing, there are more features to come this year, and we’d like to keep you involved in the process. That’s why, before releasing improvements to all users, we will be asking some of you to test these ideas and share your feedback with us, just as we did with the new catalog. With some features, we’ll want to surprise you, so expect the unexpected improvements as well!

And what is the second area of our focus, you may ask. It’s games, of course! But not just any games – it’s about classics. While we’re years from calling ourselves Good Old Games, we remember our roots, and those games will always have a special place in our hearts and on GOG. We get that actions speak louder than words, that’s why we will increase our activities around classic games. This means a plethora of things – from preparing articles and interviews about those meaningful titles, running dedicated sales and special deals, through adding more digital goodies all the way to releasing even more classic games we all miss. As for the latter, obviously we’ll keep those surprises a secret for now, but looking at the classics we brought back in Q4 2021, like Blood Omen: Legacy of Kain or Star Trek: Armada I & II, you get what we’re aiming for.



Just like with the store experience, the same goes for classic games – you may have already seen our first activities around them. For some time now we’re cooperating with The Video Game History Foundation on the Throwback Thursday initiative. Putting a spotlight on our favorite “good old games”, and adding personal stories from the GOG Team members was a no-brainer and we don’t know why it took us so long! The formula is still evolving though, so expect some updates here as well.

During the Winter Sale, thanks to the Foundation’s huge archive of assets, we were able to add new bonus goodies to titles like Tomb Raider 1+2+3, , [url=https://www.gog.com/en/game/total_anihilation_commander_pack]Total Annihilation, Thief The Dark Project, and more. Your reception was amazing – for the very first time we’ve put on sale The Video Game History Foundation Support Pack, a bundle from which all proceeds go to the Foundation. Thanks to you, we managed to gather more than $4,000 USD that will support preserving, celebrating, and teaching the history of video games. You’re the best – thank you!



That is all for now – while we don’t want to spoil any specific features, releases, or activities, we hope you like this small heads-up from us at GOG. Let us know if this type of update is something you would like to see more often, what is missing that you would definitely want us to share (having in mind sometimes we just can’t reveal some of the stuff), and share constructive feedback about our plans for 2022!
i'd like there to be a way too show update flags for games on your account in galaxy like there is on the web version.
Great that gog tries to communicate more, hope newspost. like these occure more frequently in the future.

I am not that into older games, so I hope we also see a lot of new releases this year.

What could spark my interest in such releases would be if gog would go more "Multi-Platform", either by

providing the games not only in their PC-Version but also in other forms. Like it was done with "Jim Power - The Lost Dimension"

or simply by bringing more Console-Titles to gog. Like the Contra or Castlevania Anniversary Collections.
If GOG is commiting back to older games, then you need to fix some games that have stopped working and that work on other platforms. Among these I'll mention :

The Great Battles Collection, Chaos Overlords, Incoming and a few others

There has also been a few issues with games beign "shadow released" on GOG, like the DLC for Terminator Resistance or more recently Not For Broadcast coming out of early access without any announcement.

I will also mention that some games aren't properly patched to the latest versions in some cases or making developpers aware that like on steam now Galaxy allows beta channels.
Post edited February 01, 2022 by Narakir
It's hard to feel positive for the future of Galaxy given how excruciatingly slow it's development has been, it feels like this beta might drag itself out for years. There's so many basic problems with it, like when browsing games sometimes the 'Back' button doesn't work, the store Plugins always crash, and so on.
high rated
GOG is best
So the entire post, summed up in a few words is:
New selection criteria on website and main focus on galaxy.

Sounds great, we will ignore the offline installers, lacks of changelogs, broken or missing parity. No option to download older versions or patches. No option to get decent compression archives. We will also forget the broken forum, the autodownvote bots, spam bots, the posts with no context as they are dropped into general, the forum games? Certainly the year has opened well with a stream of “adult” games, asset flips, mobile type games, and the focus on a different market (which is obvious) is also joyous of course.

Also no mention of the online gated content from your own owner, or the online content related. Or news on what happened with hitman - yep that old “mistake”. Oh, and not to forget the selling epic games, maybe some more deals to be had there, perhaps a sponsorship by denuvo?

Whilst I do hope some effort is forecast in the future I really don’t hold out any hope, it’s been years now and the future is getting progressively worse not better.
Hi!
To be honest, I love anything that makes the site more visible (catalogue, forum, etc.). I don't think anyone likes to see their home in disarray. And, the nicer the site is and the easier it is to shop, share with other users on the forum and search for what you as a user want, the better. I appreciate, as long as classic PC games are included in the GOG catalogue. And I also appreciate that new projects are added to the GOG catalogue. I am very proud to belong to this community. And over time it creates a feeling of loyalty and respect towards the company and the community itself. In my particular case, I would like to see a much more efficient customer service at GOG. We are all important at GOG. And that should always be emphasised. Thanks, GOG!
high rated
Thanks for the heads-up, it is truly appreciated!

Improving the shopping experience is one thing, after-sale support of games is the other even more important point to improve on. You have to enforce rules as regards updates, patches and adding DLC for existing titles. It is difficult to accept to have to chase down developers on Steam or social media channels, to ask or beg them to keep their product up-to-date.

We are not fans, supporters or whatever you want to call it, it is a business. It does not matter whether the games are made by one person or an AAA company. When they are not willing to invest into their business, if they can't do it alone, who cares? They got to treat shops and platforms the same in the way they deal with customers. They got time to keep their channels updatet, post News and Updates (9 times out of 10 on Steam forums), then that's what we should get over here. My point is they don't have to write it twice, it becomes a copy&paste job! For some even that seems to much to bother with doing...

What do we get? Games like Niffelheim, DLCs are out, but developer never cared to release them or patches here. Abandoned games, still in development, Plain Mechanic Simulator, still sold instead of thrown out the shop. There are many more examples and cases but these are the most seen during sales.

When patches are released, patch-logs are missing. At least at GOG, because, really, who cares? Go look on the Steam page. When there are no updates? Turn to Steam and go ask, what about GOG, when will we receive the update?

This has to stop and that's one of the most important things you can do - no if's but's or why's! In case this doesn't sink in to your upper echelon's brain-spaces, you can offer the best forum software, the nicest shop-front. When customers got enough instead of getting both an excellent shopping experience and after-sale support it is still an uphill battle you are never going to win.
Post edited February 01, 2022 by Mori_Yuki

That is all for now – while we don’t want to spoil any specific features, releases, or activities, we hope you like this small heads-up from us at GOG. Let us know if this type of update is something you would like to see more often, what is missing that you would definitely want us to share (having in mind sometimes we just can’t reveal some of the stuff), and share constructive feedback about our plans for 2022!
I sure hope there's finally a Galaxy client for Linux this year
low rated
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nightcraw1er.488: So the entire post, summed up in a few words is:
New selection criteria on website and main focus on galaxy.

Sounds great, we will ignore the offline installers, lacks of changelogs, broken or missing parity. No option to download older versions or patches. No option to get decent compression archives. We will also forget the broken forum, the autodownvote bots, spam bots, the posts with no context as they are dropped into general, the forum games? Certainly the year has opened well with a stream of “adult” games, asset flips, mobile type games, and the focus on a different market (which is obvious) is also joyous of course.

Also no mention of the online gated content from your own owner, or the online content related. Or news on what happened with hitman - yep that old “mistake”. Oh, and not to forget the selling epic games, maybe some more deals to be had there, perhaps a sponsorship by denuvo?

Whilst I do hope some effort is forecast in the future I really don’t hold out any hope, it’s been years now and the future is getting progressively worse not better.
uh you think a little for some requests you made. Asked that they keep setups from old versions. You can imagine the space it would require on the servers and how much it would cost a gog. It's not cheap especially since for each proposed gog already offers an offline setup version + a galaxy version (so already 2x more than steam). gog does not have the same resources as valve.

There are some requests I understand. But for others, you have to be realistic too. Gog doesn't have an unlimited wallet.
Maybe you could work out a deal with Disney and release a Duel Pc release of Buffy The Vampire Slayer (Xbox) & Buffy The Vampire Slayer Chaos Bleeds (Xbox,Ps2,Gamecube) 2 for 1 package deal. If not, There are other old games for Dos and other platforms that desperately need to be on gog.
Post edited February 01, 2022 by FaithTheSlayer
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ChuckBeaver: Huge backlog of old games can still be had on GOG. Hoping more older titles really will show up here.
Soldiers of Anarchy comes to mind.
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geekgamer: To me, the most exciting aspect is the fact that classic games are still coming to GOG.
As much as I enjoy fiddling with virtual machines and x86 emulation, I prefer the convenience of having my games ready to lunch in my main OS.
I can't wait to see what's coming next and I have fingers crossed for more late 90s and early 2000s games.
We are certainly looking to secure even more older titles! The classics and goodies we brought back are just the beginning :)
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chandra: ...
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Ganyse: and what about the "new games"?
In the year 2021, we could see that many indie games were present throughout, which made GOG one of the best year in terms of release
Unfortunately, at the end of the year, we could see that the profitability was not there, which forced GOG to vaguely communicate on this subject (in France, we even have more French support since, it goes through the international)

We know how GOG works: they provide a certain amount of money to some developers/editors of their games, in order to convince them to release them on it
Following this return of profitability, do you plan to reduce the number of new games to come? (I don't count those announced in 2021, and to come)
I'm personally in doubt, when it comes to this subject, and the new one doesn't really answer it (Maybe because there is nothing to answer, and GOG just wants to put aside recent games ?) , and the fact that it only focuses on the old games, without saying a word about the new ones, brings more doubt, for me
In this particular announcement we wanted to share our focus on classic titles which is why we've listed a couple of old but gold games that we've managed to bring back to GOG, but there are of course plenty of new releases happening as well (like the pre-order of Shadow Warrior 3)!
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mechmouse: Thanks for the continued improvement.

Something I'd love to see is a little more transparency on curation.

There's been quite a few occasions where I've asked Devs "Is this coming to GoG?" only to get a non-committal "We'll see" or "no plans yet", then a week or so later its on GoG.

At the point I asked them, it was almost certain they knew it was, but they couldn't say.

But for other titles we see "coming soon" months or even years before release.

This inconsistency is infuriating. Plenty of GoG users are happy to wait for a GoG release, IF they know its coming.
we always communicate the game is coming to GOG whenever possible and as soon as it's possible. However, we understand your frustration.
Good to hear that the store is still an important part of Cd Projekt and you´re doind the best to improve and maintain gog. The most important is the feeling between users and store and communicates like this bring calm to the waters. Long life to drm free gog.
This would have been a great place to acknowledge recent missteps and deliver the postmortem for them. (e.g., Hitman...)
high rated
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nightcraw1er.488: So the entire post, summed up in a few words is:
New selection criteria on website and main focus on galaxy.

Sounds great, we will ignore the offline installers, lacks of changelogs, broken or missing parity. No option to download older versions or patches. No option to get decent compression archives. We will also forget the broken forum, the autodownvote bots, spam bots, the posts with no context as they are dropped into general, the forum games? Certainly the year has opened well with a stream of “adult” games, asset flips, mobile type games, and the focus on a different market (which is obvious) is also joyous of course.

Also no mention of the online gated content from your own owner, or the online content related. Or news on what happened with hitman - yep that old “mistake”. Oh, and not to forget the selling epic games, maybe some more deals to be had there, perhaps a sponsorship by denuvo?

Whilst I do hope some effort is forecast in the future I really don’t hold out any hope, it’s been years now and the future is getting progressively worse not better.
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Lukin86: uh you think a little for some requests you made. Asked that they keep setups from old versions. You can imagine the space it would require on the servers and how much it would cost a gog. It's not cheap especially since for each proposed gog already offers an offline setup version + a galaxy version (so already 2x more than steam). gog does not have the same resources as valve.

There are some requests I understand. But for others, you have to be realistic too. Gog doesn't have an unlimited wallet.
So you are happy with broken updates? Mods that no longer work with newer versions. Updates you do not need. Content being removed? I am being realistic, they have not done anything on any issue for not one year but far too many.
As for their storage space, it doesn’t cost that much. They are able to provide a rollback function for galaxy users.
The realistic view is that offline installers simply do not matter, galaxy powering CDPrOnline is the clear priority.