← Back to context Comment by remram 4 years ago Wouldn't that "platform" need DRM to attract third-party developers too? 2 comments remram Reply johnnyanmac 4 years ago Yes, this is the issue GOG continuously ran into in order to maintain their DRM-free philosophy. DRM is a move made to please publishers, not comsumers. thaumasiotes 4 years ago GOG recently made an official statement that they're fine with DRM as long as it only affects multiplayer.That was a sad day.They haven't seen fit to change their homepage copy of "We are GOG.COM, the DRM-free home for a curated selection of games."
johnnyanmac 4 years ago Yes, this is the issue GOG continuously ran into in order to maintain their DRM-free philosophy. DRM is a move made to please publishers, not comsumers. thaumasiotes 4 years ago GOG recently made an official statement that they're fine with DRM as long as it only affects multiplayer.That was a sad day.They haven't seen fit to change their homepage copy of "We are GOG.COM, the DRM-free home for a curated selection of games."
thaumasiotes 4 years ago GOG recently made an official statement that they're fine with DRM as long as it only affects multiplayer.That was a sad day.They haven't seen fit to change their homepage copy of "We are GOG.COM, the DRM-free home for a curated selection of games."
Yes, this is the issue GOG continuously ran into in order to maintain their DRM-free philosophy. DRM is a move made to please publishers, not comsumers.
GOG recently made an official statement that they're fine with DRM as long as it only affects multiplayer.
That was a sad day.
They haven't seen fit to change their homepage copy of "We are GOG.COM, the DRM-free home for a curated selection of games."