Karterii1993: ... Unless of course I can finally get a color printer to print cover art and burn my GOG games to discs.
Point is, I see digital distribution as the DRM for memories, in a way. Even if I have no means of playing an old game I loved, just having the box would evoke all feelings I felt when I first played it.
Some actually do that with some games here, iirc.
And nice/good post....+1
Timboli: Nope, all manually using TeraCopy as the MD5/CRC copier.
I download a game, then copy it to each drive, in its own folder that contains a cover image and a copy of the game web page.
Damn, that's some amazing dedication....kudos. :)
(Also I am curious: do you save the webpage in html form or picture form?)
Timboli: Drives can die anytime, and a huge undertaking to copy that many games to a new drive, and also risky. Far better to just have lots of copies, and then copy gradually over days and maybe weeks, if one drive needs replacing.
Still, the odds of losing 2 drives at once would be very low, one would think. Also one more drive wouldn't help if they all failed at once(rare, I know, but still possible).
Timboli: While I am glad there is something, it often proves less than useful and a pain to wade through, so I just don't bother any more. Sometimes there is an up-to-date changelog in the forum topic for the game.
How is it a pain to check the latest posts for game titles and if your OS version has an update?
Timboli: However, I have been finding that over time, the Changelog often does get updated, just maybe weeks or months later. As an aid with that, I TAG all such games as UPDATED in my Library, so I can recall each one for later checking. It seems you get another notification for just the changelog being updated, when it does finally happen.
I usually also just update games when the purple dot appears or the thread says one of my games has an update...it saves me a ton of time and worrying.
Timboli: I just cannot see it happening. It would be bad for everyone, even for those who don't like Steam or don't support it. Total trust would instantly dissolve and stay that way for a very long time, and no section of the gaming industry would be unaffected. There would be millions of angry consumers, perhaps doubly so because they think us GOGers are the fools, and to be proved they were instead would be unbearable. There would be court cases like you wouldn't believe. And the acceptability of DRM from that moment on would be a total negative.
Too big to fail, just like major banks.
I don't think they are too big to fail, personally, but that it is very very unlikely.....heck, look at blockbuster and more recently the slow failure of gamestop.