It seems that you're using an outdated browser. Some things may not work as they should (or don't work at all).
We suggest you upgrade newer and better browser like: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer or Opera

×
avatar
toroca: BreOl72: Three years is indeed a long time, but stuff happens.

For example, almost a year and a half ago, I bought Divine Divinity and Wing Commander 3, 4, and 5 when they were on sale for very low prices.

I didn't get around to trying Divine Divinity until late last year, and I still haven't installed any of the Wing Commander games.

But I don't have to worry about losing access to any them like I might if they were tied to expiring keys...
Games that you buy here on GOG for yourself don't come with a key - so nothing to worry in that regard (going by your last sentence, you know that already).

Same with the installation part: nobody cares, how long your files sit uninstalled on you HDD.

With that we come to the important part: downloading.

That's what everyone should do with their newly acquired games, as soon as they show up in one's account.

Way too many GOG users just buy, but never download.
The day will come, when they will rue that...but hey: they have been warned many times.

Some people apparently need to feel the pain to learn the lesson.
shrug
Not my problem.
avatar
Reznov64: Amazing how Humble Bundle can still offer keys for some games that have been delisted for years yet there are others it immediately ceases all sales. I wonder why they uphold such double standards for their keys.
avatar
amok: It’s not a double standard, it depends on the publishers of the games. Humble doesn’t generate the keys, they receive them from publishers. If a publisher provides them with batches of 50 keys, then once the game is delisted and they run out of those keys, that’s it. If the publisher had instead given them a batch of 1,000 keys, they can continue distributing them until the batch is depleted.

However, digital stores cannot sell new copies of games on their own. Online digital stores act as middlemen, facilitating sales between publishers and buyers. If a publisher decides to stop selling a game, the store must immediately comply. The store’s role is to process the transaction, take a percentage cut of each sale, and send the rest of the revenue to the publisher.

This is different from a physical store, where the retailer buys copies of the game directly from the publisher and then sells them to buyers at a markup. In that case, the interaction between the store and the publisher ends at the point of purchase, after that, it’s entirely up to the store what to do with the remaining stock.

(this is also why a physical store can sell at sales however they want, but a DD store can only have sales in agreement with the publishers)
Amazon does not comply at all with that logic. Red Wasp Design went out of business years ago yet Amazon is still selling and distributing broken versions of Call of Cthulhu: The Wasted Land. Sales were all cease and desist on Humble Bundle and Steam but Amazon is still selling the game:

https://www.amazon.com/Call-Cthulhu-Wasted-Land-Download/dp/B00D3TONR6

Mind you these are not keys, these are downloads of the game .exe itself. However its the broken version that does not include any of the DLC or patches that are present in the Steam version.

But I guess the law does not apply to megacorporations.
Post edited February 17, 2025 by Reznov64