Lovely game, great humor - at least from my perspective - don't buy it here. This game has not received the love and support it has on Steam. It's been over half a year since the DLC came out on steam and it's still nowhere to be seen on here. The game is also behind patch-wise. At the moment of writing the game seems to have been abandoned on GOG. Great game, just don't do the mistake I and others have done and buy it on here. The devs are a small team and GOG is most likely not on their radar any more. Frankly, I wish devs that have no interest in supporting their games on here would just stop releasing them here. It would be more honest then what we usually get.
Linux port is broken AF and will only get harder to run as time goes by. A byproduct of Linux's horrible backwards compatibility. As of 2019 the game won't run unless you waste a few hours googling potential library problems. And should you get it to run, well, just wait for your system to update to solve that "issue". Not recommended if you're a linux user.
Good game, like all Lazy Bear Games games, but, like all Lazy Bear Games game it's incredibly grind heavy. If I didn't know any better I'd say the devs are former arcade game devs that never got over arcades no longer being a thing any more. The game has a nice, easy to grasp idea and at first glance you'll realise how entertaining it is. Then you find yourself 20 hours in and with barely any progress and begin to wonder if you're doing anything wrong. You're not. The game is designed with grinding in mind. Other games do this as well, yet, somehow they succeed where Lazy Bear Games keeps on failing. Worse off is probably the fact that the game dangles an entire section before your for the entire course of the game only for you to actually finish the game and realise that the Town section was never completed so it's not in the game. Again, the game isn't bad, it's just that you'll probably get your fill of the game a dozen or more hours before you hit the end. You might return to the game and try plying it again. You will once more enjoy your time with the game and you once more will find your enjoyment wane far sooner then the devs intended. Don't get me wrong, it's not the fist game to do this. Darkest Dungeon comes to mind doing something similar. You just need to know that if you start this game, you will find it funny, and nice, and entertaining but you are unlikely to ever actually finish is - not unless you are a completionist that will grow to resent the game by the end or are really, really into the game - which, again, is a possibility.
I recently moved to Linux and I just found out that Starbound requires an open Steam client to run. It doesn't need to be owned on there, it just needs the Linux Steam client to run to open the game. This breaks the whole DRM-free part of owning it on GoG in the first place. I never had a problem like this on Windows so I assume it's a Linux only thing. Since I never had the game in the days of prerelease I'm not one of those people that will get angry on having lost things I never even new existed. But having to resort to running steam for a game I bought on GoG... that's less forgivable.