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GOG.com is getting an update today! Learn about the new features and improvements.

Today some new features and improvement are coming your way on GOG.com. Our web dev team did their best to improve your experience with our store and implement some of the requested changes. The update also facilitates a new kind of bundle deals, allowing you to save money when completing game series in your collection. All of the new features and improvements will be rolled out today. If you don't see something mentioned here working for you yet, just wait a bit and check again in a couple of hours. Let's go into some detail and sum up all the changes, shall we?

Let's start with the new sweet deals we've prepared for you. A while back we did a test run of game series bundles that allowed for purchase of full series of games at a reduced price. This will now be a permanent feature on GOG.com. We've prepared over 80 such offers, so those of you who like to see a complete set of your favorite games series in their virtual shelves, can achieve that goal up to 57.89% cheaper (that would be the case of Telltale's Sam & Max series). If you already have a game, or some games, featured in the bundle, you can always complete the collection and get the remaining ones with a discount.

Sam & Max game series discount

The gamecard pages are getting an overhaul. The new version brings more focus to the game's trailer, as we have those available in most cases nowadays. As they say, an image is worth a thousand words, and a trailer is a set of images displayed at ~29 frames per second. Then, we've altered the way that screenshot thumbnails are presented, just to make watching all the visual content for the game easier and more intuitive. All this doesn't mean we're giving up on text! The "what's cool about it" bullet points, as well as the description are still a prominent feature of the design, now displayed side-by-side with the frame informing you about other associated titles and deals.

Ever since we introduced DLCs to GOG.com, the most popular comment from you guys was: "make them display relative to their main game, not as a separate product". That was our intention from the start, but it took some time to whip-up such a system. Today, we're happy to say it's ready. The DLCs will no longer display as separate boxes in your collections. They'll be merged and folded out from the main game box. Similarly, in the catalog, if a game offers DLC it will be all linked together, and the downloadable content will be also enumerated in the appropriate gamecard. All downloadable content items will be listed with a "DLC:" prefix in GOG.com catalog, to avoid any confusion. Entering a game's title in the search engine will display all the available expansions as well. This mechanics doesn't only focus on DLCs, but will also allow us to support new types of gaming content, like episodic titles.

Sword of the Stars: The Pit + DLC in the catalog

We're almost there, just two more things we'd like to point out. The catalog search and sorting has been updated to work faster, so browsing our offer should go a lot more smoothly now for you. And finally, a new system of check-out notifications has been implemented, to inform you about the system requirements of the games in your order. It will also warn you, if you try to buy a DLC or an episode that requires a title you don't have in your collection.

We hope you'll find that our newest update improves your experience with GOG.com! Be on the lookout for a special contest we'll be launching very soon, that will involve you taking an in-depth tour of the new gamecard layout.
Post edited August 05, 2013 by G-Doc
Bumping a Stylish stylesheet for people who don't like the new gamecard layout.
Thanks for this, looks good. +1
It looks like you have a terrible website structure. Everytime you update something, there is a huge mayhem going around

1. games ratings disappearing
2. search function no longer shows me that I own a game before I click on it
3. can't download several games

the most known bugs so far. What's next? Disappearing games from shelves?
Thumbs up for your stylesheet, that seems like a much more sensible design, with a full row of screenshots, the game info all in one block, the recommendations and GOG mixes neatly arranged next to the reviews. :)

Personally I would also prefer the videos to move below the text (or, a little more complicated, their intitial size to be shrinked to a tiny box, that maximizes only after clicking it), so that the screenshots are the first thing I see when opening a page, without me having to scroll down, because while I appreciate the option to watch some gameplay footage or a trailer, scanning screenshots and text first is a much quicker and comfortable way of judging whether a game might interest me at all. Spending time on watching a video would be the second step only - I wouldn't do that for each and every game even before knowing what type of game it is.
Love the new features, hate the new gamecards...
One small drawback I've noticed is that the reviews with position:absolute can overlap the copyright information, e.g. on http://www.gog.com/game/the_pit_mindgames_dlc. I'm not sure whether that can be fixed, but I thought I'd point it out in case you wanted to know.
Attachments:
Post edited August 08, 2013 by VanishedOne
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VanishedOne: One small drawback I've noticed is that the reviews with position:absolute can overlap the copyright information, e.g. on http://www.gog.com/game/the_pit_mindgames_dlc. I'm not sure whether that can be fixed, but I thought I'd point it out in case you wanted to know.
Thanks for pointing that out. I didn't notice any with the copyright info. I'll have a little time to see if it can be fixed later.
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DarrenMcLachlan: A couple of months ago, I suggested to GOG that, in order to make their website more user-friendly, they could make it so that a new window opens when you click on a game whilst browsing.
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AKKADIAN: o.0
Right click / Open in new Tab

...Or better yet SHIFT and Left Click

Scrub.
Or: click with mouse wheel (button 3) ;-)
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AKKADIAN: o.0
Right click / Open in new Tab

...Or better yet SHIFT and Left Click

Scrub.
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real.geizterfahr: Or: click with mouse wheel (button 3) ;-)
Or use The Force™
The GOG's interface MUST be MULTILANGUAGE..

The GOG's system, automatically MUST detect the user's country and show the website's interface in a language acording to that:

Example: If the system detects that the user IP is from Argentina, all the gog's interface must be shown in Spanish.. If the IP is from France, the site interface must be automatically switched to french..

But the user must have the option to configure manually the main language...
Switching the language according to the user's IP is something that I personally dislike very much. In my oppinion it is sufficient to have all web sites in English only. It is not worth the effort to translate all the text to many different languages. English is the language everyone should speak nowadays. My own homepage is available in English only, too. GOG should continue to concentrate on high quality content instead of wasting manpower for translation work.
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Digital_CHE: The GOG's interface MUST be MULTILANGUAGE..
I'd say "should", but then I'm quite happy with English ...
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Digital_CHE: The GOG's system, automatically MUST detect the user's country and show the website's interface in a language acording to that:
... especially if the translation isn't all that hot, as it still happens far too often in software.

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Digital_CHE: Example: If the system detects that the user IP is from Argentina, all the gog's interface must be shown in Spanish.. If the IP is from France, the site interface must be automatically switched to french..
That's the wrong strategy.
There's an "Accept-Language:" HTTP header, and the GOG store should respect that.
You can change it in the browser settings.

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Digital_CHE: But the user must have the option to configure manually the main language...
Nice to have and likely little extra effort, but I think in addition to some fixed language there should be the explicit option to follow "Accept-Language:"
Post edited August 08, 2013 by mmilleder
The English language makes it possible for us to communicate with each other here on the forums and elsewhere, although we don't all speak the same native language. So, we have to learn English anyway for international communication. But I must admit Mandarin Chinese and Spanish also have a very high amount of speakers. So, maybe we should all switch to Chinese?
Post edited August 08, 2013 by BinaryPoet
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BinaryPoet: The English language makes it possible for us to communicate with each other here on the forums and elsewhere, although we don't all speak the same native language. So, we have to learn English anyway for international communication. But I must admit Mandarin Chinese and Spanish also have a very high amount of speakers. So, maybe we should all switch to Chinese?
I think it's respectful to want to translate into local languages. Short money invested to broaden an audience that doesn't speak a particular language.

But, whatever is wrong with www.gog.fr, or www.gog.ch? Hell, we can even have www.gog.SPANISH, www.gog.RUSSIAN since the top level domains are changing, too.

Thankfully, i don't connect via vpn to another country and browse the web.
Don't bother translating GOG.com to other languages. I wonder why do people complain about website in English while 95% of games sold here are English only?