Comment by Gormo

1 month ago

Not sure what you're trying to say here. The distinction is pretty clear: GOG distributes standalone installers without any DRM, and Steam does not.

What does the installer matter for DRM-free software? For software with other forms of DRM built-in anyway, who cares if the installer has it?

  • The whole reason for GOG existing was they strip dead DRM from old games so the work again without "warez scene" cracks; and fix all the OS/driver incompatibilities along the way.

    As far as I know all the games you can buy on GOG will be completely DRM free.

  • Correct, but GOG provides games without _any_ DRM, both in the installer and in the game itself.

  • > What does the installer matter for DRM-free software?

    Requiring a network-connected proprietary client to install the software is itself a form of DRM.

    > For software with other forms of DRM built-in anyway, who cares if the installer has it?

    Again, GOG does not distribute games that include DRM, whether in the installer or in the game itself.