• @UndercoverUlrikHD@programming.dev
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    8 months ago

    Better than Steam I’d argue. Unlike Steam, games you buy on GOG are yours to keep forever. No DRM like steam that forces you to log on after a few days offline. You also get better version control.

    Edit: the offline limit was a bug. Offline restrictions would be dependent on the DRM solution for each individual game.

    • @AzureFrost@lemmy.zip
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      187 months ago

      There are DRM free games on steam. If you can launch the game directly from the exe while steam is off, then the game is DRM free.

      • @barsquid@lemmy.world
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        67 months ago

        I don’t want to have to open the game page to figure that out. Also if there was a filter I could find and choose not to see DRM games at all, that would be very cool.

    • @FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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      87 months ago

      The DRM layers are added by game publishers, not by Steam, but yeah it is a little annoying that games on steam have to be launched through steam. There are some fake Steam overheads floating around to bypass that for use of running games on multiple local machines simultaneously.

      • dandi8
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        128 months ago

        There is no DRM on GOG. You can just download the offline installer, then install it even without an internet connection. It will never ask you to go online because it doesn’t need to check anything.

      • After digging into it, it seems like the 2 week limit was a bug that has been fixed by steam. So there is no Steam enforced limit, it’s up to each game’s DRM to enforce restrictions. Steam can function as DRM with a simple command during upload, but it’s rather basic and Valve recommends publishers to use additional DRM for more serious protection.

        GOG on the other hand is DRM free as a core policy so you’re guaranteed no restrictions.