Ancient-Red-Dragon: Steam became a monopoly by way of
strong-arming physical discs --- which all games were on prior to Steam - out of business, in collusion with other institutions in the the industry who helped them do it. Consumers didn't 'choose' Steam in the early days, but rather they were
forced either to buy Steam client-DRM-infested games, or else not buy any games at all, since there were no longer any Steam-free games being offered in the stores. Even games that had physical discs in their boxes were still tied to the Steam DRM client.
Half-Life 2 was the real trojan horse that gave Steam their leverage, I remember how many people were up in arms screaming bloody murder about the mandatory online requirements... but they all just gave in and bought it any way because protesting with any real conviction would have meant not getting the shiny thing right now, and they knew that convenience and apathy would win out over conviction.
Ancient-Red-Dragon: As for the Devotion debacle: it seems like GOG's strategy to completely ignore it until it blows over might work, sadly. There are lot of happy campers about some new releases who don't seem to care too much about GOG lying to their customers and bending the knee and censoring to appease the CCP. And that's happened very recently after the debacle started. In a few weeks or months, how many more people will jump back on the happy GOG camper bandwagon?
Hell people are already starting to forget and go back to happy GOG time. I feel so hopeless and dejected about the situation, I still haven't been able to fully come to terms with the fact that GOG lied, bold faced and guilt free, right to our faces. I hate to get all blackpilled, but I also cannot see anyone being capable of taking up the mantle if GOG fails either, if this alleged DRM free juggernaut goes under the whole DRM free movement is likely going to be demoralized in perpetuity.
GamezRanker: The difference between GOG and Steam being, of course, that GOG operates on much thinner margins.....and with CDPR stock down quite a bit(between 25 and 35 percent), I would say the chances their bottom line will be affected by the recent events is likely good.
That though is all on CDPR, all eyes are on their failure, not on GOG's ethics violations, so I could see them bouncing back, taking responsibility for the game's mistakes whilst still sweeping the rest of the issues under the rug and ignoring them.