Greybriar: I do not believe boycotting GOG is the right thing to do. I believe that not purchasing a game and letting GOG know why is more in keeping with the spirit of the site. But to deny GOG the funds necessary for it to stay in business is carrying things too far.
This is why it works.
The situation:
GoG: people aren't buying here anymore and have flooded our Twitter, Facebook, social media accounts and forums with everything we are doing wrong.
Releasing broken games
Lying about our products and deceiving our customers and investors
Not responding to customer service tickets
Banning users they defrauded for pointing out they were defrauded and are unhappy
Banning games and blaming "Many gamers"
Eliminating the GOG Downloader
Not supporting the offline installers
Adding DRM Games (to a store that is supposed to be DRM free)
Locking content behind the "Optional" Galaxy client
Removing the offline installers, bringing them back - but hiding them, attaching galaxy to all downloads (then removed),
Bending the knee to scumbags on twitter and banning games like Hatred
Bending the knee and firing Linko
Throwing your own employees under the bus and doxxing them (Linko)
No transparency in Curation
Rejecting any and all games that are not AAA release, 2D Metroidvanias or RPGs
Claiming you care about "Good Old Games" and then reject them. (Mushihimesama by Cave games, 90% rating Steam originally released 2004 in arcades (Old, no program bug problems, highly respected developer, no need for continuing updates, exceptionally high rated - Rejected).
The only 2 outcomes:
1. GOG recognizes the errors, ignores the errors and just keeps doing the same things and hope for a different result and GOG goes under.
2. GOG recognizes the errors, acknowledges the errors, makes the necessary changes and corrects the errors and improves. Happy customers buy happily and GOG grows and succeeds.