Posted September 18, 2018

Trilarion
New User
Registered: Jul 2010
From Germany

TStael
A Finn
Registered: May 2011
From Finland
Posted September 20, 2018

To illustrate where I come from: I love home museums, but I always wonder if people that died in them intended their domestic life to be on display, alongside their "greatness" or "representitiveness?" Whom was it that cleaned up the mess that dying leaves?
Horta Museum in Brussels is fab - and the one curiosity that engaged me and my excellent Belgian pal was the "lazy John" pull out pissoir at the master bedroom of that narrow and high house.
To me it told Horta could not hold his piss, and did not consider his wife too much. To my pal it told other things.
To summarise: passing on digital games we own should be casual, as passing money or physical discs. Gog.com could allow us to volunteer an e-mail for our heir.

Trilarion
New User
Registered: Jul 2010
From Germany

BreOl72
Gamer since Pong on the Atari 2600
Registered: Sep 2010
From Germany
Posted September 21, 2018

If you click on it, it opens a new page, where you'll find this (or something similar worded, since I had to translate this from German):
11.1
(h) GOG Accounts may not be shared, "bought," "sold," transferred, gifted, loaned, stolen, or transferred. [...]
That's the legal side of it.
I remember, GOG saying in the past, that you could install your games on as many computers as you have in your household...so, you playing on one computer, and your siblings playing on one or two (or three, four...) other computers, would have been a-ok with them.
However - if your siblings don't live with you under the same roof...that changes things, I'd say.
At the end it all comes down to your moral/ethics.
Edit: argh...should've read further before answering your post...looks like I've been ninja'd eleven days ago by Maighstir. XD
Post edited September 21, 2018 by BreOl72

MartiusR
Knight
Registered: Dec 2010
From Poland
Posted September 21, 2018


If you click on it, it opens a new page, where you'll find this (or something similar worded, since I had to translate this from German):
11.1
(h) GOG Accounts may not be shared, "bought," "sold," transferred, gifted, loaned, stolen, or transferred. [...]
That's the legal side of it.
I remember, GOG saying in the past, that you could install your games on as many computers as you have in your household...so, you playing on one computer, and your siblings playing on one or two (or three, four...) other computers, would have been a-ok with them.
However - if your siblings don't live with you under the same roof...that changes things, I'd say.
At the end it all comes down to your moral/ethics.
Edit: argh...should've read further before answering your post...looks like I've been ninja'd eleven days ago by Maighstir. XD
Anyway - as I've mentioned a couple of posts earlier, I feel that I've gathered (more or less) opinions (especially those where users interacted between themselves). So, that's it :)
Post edited September 21, 2018 by MartiusR

TStael
A Finn
Registered: May 2011
From Finland
Posted October 12, 2018

But my natural gaming heirs should be my brother, my best friend - and ideally children whose parents cannot afford games.
I have to ask my bro if he'd have the strenght to fight for this. I'd love the idea. But I regret to think that gog.com just hopes our dying isi the ultimate DRM.