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The GOG Games Festival: Spring Edition is in full swing and we’re adding more deals, more demos, and a giveaway.

Let’s start with the free stuff – Thea 2: The Shattering is now available for free for 48 hours till April 1st at 1 PM UTC – redeem it from the front page banner. The game is a mix of turn-based, 4X strategy, survival, RPG and a card game, and is heavily influenced by Slavic mythology – you take on a role of a deity and as such, control the fate of a small flock of believers struggling for survival. It was praised for developing the original concept, adding a lot more content, and making you go for just “one more turn”.

The GOG Games Festival is all about discovering what’s coming on the conveyer belt of the GOG machine and experiencing those titles via demos. We’ve started with around 30 demo versions to check games like Terra Nil, Ozymandias: Bronze Age Empire Sim, Bibots to name a few. Now we’re adding new ones for Racine, Imperial Grace, Sclash, McPixel 3, and more to bump the number to more than 50.

Last but not least, what would be an event like this without new DRM-free deals – the line up got bigger among others thanks to the addition of Bethesda classics including Fallout: New Vegas Ultimate Edition (-50%), Heretic + Hexen Collection (-70%), Prey: Digital Deluxe Edition (-70%), Dishonored: Complete Collection (-70%).

We’ve also compiled users’ favorite collections of best-in-class titles, for fans of specific genres or themes, like Timeless-Classics, RPGs, Strategies, or Action/Adventure games.

You can check what great things the GOG Games Festival has in place on a dedicated hub. Don’t wait up, visit our store before the event ends on April 4th, 1 PM UTC!
Post edited March 30, 2022 by chandra
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Carradice:
Thanks for the details.
About KoDP though... Yeah, seems like you can ease into it, but after two failures way back I lost any belief that I had what it takes to do better and it's been waiting for me to give it another go for 6.5 years now. At the start of every year I put it on the list of games to play that year and never even tried again since then, thinking that if the third attempt would go just as badly (or, alternately, would require looking up a guide leading to entirely unenjoyable gameplay in order to have a chance) I'll really call it as abandoned for good, and I don't want that. Ah well.
Then again, Gothic 2 is in that boat as well.