Posted April 04, 2018
Yepoleb
GOG DB Developer
Registered: Dec 2015
From Austria
Cavalary
RIP GoodOldGOG:DRMfree,one price,goodies,community
Registered: May 2011
From Romania
Posted April 04, 2018
Yepoleb
GOG DB Developer
Registered: Dec 2015
From Austria
Posted April 04, 2018
I'm so sorry for not investing my time into the things you deem important. Good luck finding the information I collect somewhere else.
Gede
GNU/Linux user
Registered: Nov 2014
From Portugal
Posted April 04, 2018
(I did think it was odd, but you did find things. So, you were right.)
Perhaps the lower boundary was reserved for movies? How were those IDs? I don't recall how to check the ID of a product.
joppo
New User
Registered: Dec 2011
From Brazil
Posted April 04, 2018
This is unfortunately the same argument I've refuted multiple times before. MaGog tracks the prices without the Fair Price Package wallet credit...
Still, I think it is weird that these publishers pushed for a surcharge to people who are statistically speaking poorer than americans and europeans. In my opinion these publishers have very little reason to do that, other than personal bias against a certain country. (It's very weird because they are extremely inconsistent. Nobody pays more than brazilians for Silver, yet no other game from Nordic is priced above the base price. Ditto with Frozenbyte's Shadowgronds Survivor, Ubisoft's Raving Rabids...)
In this case it's more about me wanting to judge a publisher's "bias" as a factor that might make me want to boycott them than wanting to save the money that is later returned to me. It's a factor for me, it appears to be a dealbreaker for Cavalary, but it's at least data that can help one decide.
I also like the idea of having the data to be able to know that for example a publisher is okay with giving my people a 30% discount. Makes me happier to support them (although I have a more direct benefit with the lower price than the indirect benefit of seeing my countrymates being able to enjoy more and better games).
Oh I never meant it would be indefinitely. It's just that collecting the data is obviously needed before displaying it, and at least I take far longer at tweaking interfaces than at the data gathering stage. If I were in your place and I was too busy to work on the hypothetical new functionality that wouldn't mean too busy to modify the data collection.
Still, you alone decide your schedule and your goals for GogDB and it's not my place to do anything other than suggest. Whatever you decide, that's good.
Wait, what? This sounds like what I actually want after all. I don't know how I never saw it but I'm reading its thread right now. Thank you.
muntdefems
How appropriate. You fight like a cow.
Registered: Jul 2014
From Poland
Posted April 04, 2018
I'll simply say that, because of the reasons you point out, these particular cases may very well be simply typos/pricing errors that nobody has ever bothered to correct. You might want to open a support ticket listing these price anomalies.
PS: If you do, good luck. I did the same last year but, as far as I know, no anomalous price has been modified since then. :\
joppo
New User
Registered: Dec 2011
From Brazil
Yepoleb
GOG DB Developer
Registered: Dec 2015
From Austria
Posted April 04, 2018
pygogapi has no thread, only the API documentation does. If you need help figuring out the code feel free to message me, it's not exactly straight forward to be honest.
WinterSnowfall
Bastard Lunatic
Registered: Apr 2012
From Romania
Posted April 04, 2018
GOG does not directly display a product's ID on their website, so it's rather hard to check it directly (it is there in the underlying site variables though, so you can just go to dev/inspection mode in any browser you are using and find it). Of course, there's also the GOG Database - one of the projects which gives you access to a multitude of data that GOG does not expose directly.
Personally, I'd like to thank you for what you've done so far. Of course I hope you'll keep adding features to it in the future, but even what we have so far is a very neatly presented and useful baseline. Keep up the good work :).
Post edited April 04, 2018 by WinterSnowfall
adaliabooks
"Vell, Zaphod's just zis guy, you know?"
Registered: Jun 2013
From United Kingdom
Posted April 04, 2018
Even just as an easy way to look up IDs it's very handy (and more user friendly than MaGog) but having the other information available there as well, as well as the documenting of all the API stuff you did, is very useful.
Krokzter
New User
Registered: Apr 2017
From Portugal
Posted April 04, 2018
Would you consider making a Chrome extension that adds a GOG DB button to the official GOG pages redirecting to gogdb.org? I've been looking for something sort of like Enhanced Steam, but for GOG.
joppo
New User
Registered: Dec 2011
From Brazil
Posted April 04, 2018
I will give it a try soon and ask for your help if I need it (as I probably will). I will just try to get used to python before bothering you. Thank you.
Yepoleb
GOG DB Developer
Registered: Dec 2015
From Austria
Posted April 05, 2018
Even just as an easy way to look up IDs it's very handy (and more user friendly than MaGog) but having the other information available there as well, as well as the documenting of all the API stuff you did, is very useful.
Yes, I've considered it and even started working on a prototype, but wasn't satisfied with the result. I think I'll pick it up again since work on the main database is a bit frustrating at the moment.
Post edited April 05, 2018 by Yepoleb
kbnrylaec
Asuka Tanaka
Registered: Nov 2011
From Taiwan
Posted April 05, 2018
I check gogdb everyday and look up for record low price before buying any game here.
Thank you for the already great product.
Thank you for the already great product.
HypersomniacLive
The Reluctant Voter
Registered: Sep 2011
From Vatican City