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75-90% off Duke Nukem 1+2, Duke Nukem 3D, Balls of Steel, Manhattan Project.

The Duke. Men want to be him, women want to be with him. The manliest of men, the ultimate male role model. He's been kicking ass on GOG.com for years, but on December 31 2015, Duke has to step out to get more bubble gum. On that day, all Duke Nukem games on GOG.com will be removed from our catalog, but we are in talks with the new rightsholders to bring them back as swiftly as possible. That's why we bid you a <span class="bold">farewell for now, Duke</span>: with every Duke Nukem game at 90% off as a bundle, or -75% individually.




The Duke's humble beginnings lie with Duke Nukem 1 + 2, two explosively cool run-n-gun platformers where Duke kicks his very first alien ass, travels in time, and authors "Why I'm SO Great" - a retrospective and autobiography. All in the year 1997, a dystopian near-future.

Years later, on January 29, 1996, our time: Duke makes history. Total meltdown follows the release of Duke Nukem 3D in which we finally see the world through the man's eyes. It's a world of pornography, violence, and candid obscenity. Duke's world. And we are entranced. By the campy risque, and by the unadulterated joy of Duke's violent adventures and one-liners.

Then, for years Duke rides the hype-train: in 1997, we behold his Balls of Steel - a pinball game warmly welcomed for its smooth, realistic physics and plenty of Duke on the side. In the year 2002, Duke goes back to basics in Duke Nukem: Manhattan Project, a modern 3D sidescrolling platformer that's nothing if not a fun and mindless pleasure.




This is not where the Duke Nukem legacy ends, but it is where we part ways - for now. So <span class="bold">Farewell, Duke</span>! The sale will last until December 31, 10:59 AM GMT. The games will be removed from sale soon thereafter, but they will not disappear from your shelf if you're an owner.
Come get some.







Last chance to get Dragonsphere for free.
With the start of the new year, Dragonshpere will no longer be a free game on GOG.com due to new publisher agreements. If you haven't claimed a copy for yourself, make sure to do so by December 31, 22:59 PM GMT - afterwards the game will be regularly priced at $5.99.

If you haven't yet, you can also check out our catalog of gaming freebies, where you'll find classics like Beneath a Steel Sky, Biomenace, Ultima IV and ten more!
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IwubCheeze: Ummmmmm, GOG already stated that they were currently negotiating with the new rights holders. Isn't it a little too early to be spewing venom, bile and hate at Gearbox at this time?
Yeah, I agree with you. :) Although Gearbox doesn't really have a clean track record I do hope the negotiations work out and that The Duke will return. And I wouldn't mind other Gearbox games here as well. I did enjoy Borderlands.
Buyiŋg the Duke games at this price shouldn't be a question. But I do not want to have another Fallout problem in my library.

So when these games (hopefully) come back to GOG will they come back as the same games so that they are displayed as owned when I buy them now or will they come back as different games and annoy me as not owned games like the Fallout games?
Damn.
I think of GOG as a museum, and we lost today a pretty important Michelangelo - or Jackson Pollock, that fits Duke better...
Sure, its cheap but ... I already got the pinball game (which is great!) and I have already played the others in the past.
Sad to see Duke Nukem games leaving the GOG catalog. The only game that I don't have is Manhattan Project, so I grabbed a copy.
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deonast: Have to wonder how much they might actually make out of it. Existing customers would have it if they have their eye on the site. So to capitalise they really have to hope that GOG user based grows a lot more to get more eye balls on their game. Yes the new pricing would be consistent with steam.

I bought this game years ago on special in a hard cover book form with CD, such an odd package I picked it up for the AUD $4.95 price. So base price is a little much, but I guess they are hoping on sales on the game which lower the price to try and sell units. Still would be hard to recover from the $0 price history.
As Steam users notice the game is free on GOG I imagine it will increase the sales there as well...

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Grargar: Not Night Dive, but Tommo.
It list as owned by ND both on Steam and their site.
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KasperHviid: Sure, its cheap but ... I already got the pinball game (which is great!) and I have already played the others in the past.
I'd always avoided the pinball game, didn't think it would really be my thing. But for the price (since I own the rest of the games in the bundle), I picked it up :)
Nope. I wasn't talking about Gearbox and Duke Nukem.
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Shadowstalker16: Club Gearbox into the ground. And now they're making a new Homeworld game and releasing it only on steam. And no HW Remaster on GOG either.
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zgrillo2004: blame "psychichazard" for his retarded gog policy
Who is that? You mean Randy Pitchfork (yes; I know that's not his name)?
Grabbed them all, minus Duke 3D. Already own it, and was my very first GOG game!

It's a sin to see the Duke go, really it is. Hope to see him back on GOG and those negotiations work out. For now, I got a whole lot of bubble gum to chew... and I'm out of gum.
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Ingsoc85: It list as owned by ND both on Steam and their site.
Published, not owned. You'll also notice Retroism as the publisher, which is a collaboration between Night Dive and Tommo (in addition, all the games that are published by Retroism here used to be published by Tommo). The only series that Night Dive really owns is System Shock. All the rest of the games shown as published by them on Steam, as well those that they show on their site aren't owned by them; they merely act as intermediaries for Tommo and the other license-holders.
Post edited December 28, 2015 by Grargar
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eiii: I do not want to have another Fallout problem in my library.
Oh jeez, I hadn't even thought of that.
That is a very annoying thing.
low rated
Popped in to see what was happening. It is sad to see a lack of maturity (not the good kind) on the community. Shame.
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zgrillo2004: blame "psychichazard" for his retarded gog policy
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Shadowstalker16: Who is that? You mean Randy Pitchfork (yes; I know that's not his name)?
some asshole moderator who last year closed multiple topics regarding GOG because it was "discussing piracy"
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Ingsoc85: It list as owned by ND both on Steam and their site.
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Grargar: Published, not owned. You'll also notice Retroism as the publisher, which is a collaboration between Night Dive and Tommo (in addition, all the games that are published by Retroism here used to be published by Tommo). The only series that Night Dive really owns is System Shock. All the rest of the games shown as published by them on Steam, as well those that they show on their site aren't owned by them; they merely act as intermediaries for Tommo and the other license-holders.
The world of publishers / license holders is a complicated one. No matter what content it is. I have some DVD / Blu-rays with 5 different companies involved in getting the product out.