Is there any reason why I shouldn’t buy FO4 goty from GOG instead of steam? You can still customize controls perfectly fine and all the mods/expansions still work? It won’t play any differently to a steam bought game except it will be in non-steam games?

I know games usually work fine, but I haven’t bought a new game from GOG since I got my steamdeck, so I’m nervous.

  • gila
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    212 months ago

    You could just refund it if it doesn’t work well for you. GOG are usually pretty generous

  • @CaptainEffort@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    Depends on what you’re looking for. On Steam you get stuff like Steam Input, and ofc having it be tied into the Steam ecosystem, which depending on how you play pc can be a big deal or not so much. Plus if you plan on playing on Deck, it’s a bit easier if you own it on Steam.

    With GoG it’ll be DRM free, which for many people is a massive deal. Basically once it’s downloaded it has zero ties to GoG, meaning it’s yours and yours alone, you can do whatever you want with it, back it up, turn off your internet and play it whenever you want. You can even download it from the website without having to install the GoG client.

    Plus through GoG you can easily install the Fallout London mod, which may be a nice bonus depending on you.

    Ultimately I’d say GoG unless you’re heavily invested into Steam and would make use of the integration with the ecosystem.

    • @RozzOP
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      52 months ago

      Thanks.

      Steam input, meaning the easy way to select control options, instead of having to link to a keyboard button?

      • Ech
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        2 months ago

        The only thing having a native steam game gets you is the community submitted layouts for steam input, and you can get those pretty easily with some messing with game titles. Even without any of that, though, you can edit the controls to whatever you want.

      • @CaptainEffort@sh.itjust.works
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        42 months ago

        Exactly, yeah. It’s not super important, like in FO4 idk how helpful it’d be, but it’s a game changer sometimes. I played through Kotor on the Deck by using Steam Input, and made it feel practically native with next to no effort.

        • Björn Tantau
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          42 months ago

          Works with non-Steam games as well. I even had community profiles for Diablo 2. You just have to give the game the correct name and it should just work™.

        • @RozzOP
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          22 months ago

          Yeah, fallout isn’t that complicated. I’ve configured a number of keyboard strategy games, so this should be easy compared to those if I go that route. Thanks.

  • FubarberryM
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    2 months ago

    Steam versions of games tend to run a little better, and also benefit from things like Steam distributing pre-compiled shaders for the games. There are also some cases where non-steam games will require you to install specific windows components through wine for the game or in-game media to work.

    Overall Fallout 4 should work, but without actually trying it I can’t say if it will work without tinkering or not.

    Edit: did some searching, sounds like it mostly works, but you may have to manually install xact_64 to get sound working.

    • @RozzOP
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      22 months ago

      Thanks for your edit. I did run into that problem, but you gave me a better starting point! probably saved me hours of frustrated searching.

      My solution, if anyone else needs this, was to install winetricks (through the discovery store) > and install xact_64 for the game (Install a Windows DLL or component). I mostly followed this tutorial and used xact_64 instead of whatever they said. And I did install FO4 through heroic the first time.

  • @Kaboom@reddthat.com
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    92 months ago

    If you want to play Fallout London, get the GOG version. It’s extremely easy to set up. The steam version needs you to revert it back before BGS broke it with the next gen update. It’s a pain.

  • @the16bitgamer@programming.dev
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    62 months ago

    Why you shouldn’t buy FO4 on GOG: On Linux it’s a bit more work, installing the game via steam it’s just one button and you are good. GOG you need a third party game manager like Heroic or Lutris. From there you can add it to steam, you’ll also want to download art as the ones provided by lutris are low res.

    You’ll also have a hard time with online saves as you’ll need to also install GOG galaxy, which isn’t fun and is very buggy.

    That said, from an application perspective, it’s running on Proton regardless, so it’ll run the same. And since the folders are easier to find (more structured like windows), I personally find modding in general easier.

    The reason you want to buy the GOG version is that it’s drm free and yours to keep. No launcher required. Not something you’d care about on a steam deck, but on a PC it’s nice to have.

  • @capably8341@sh.itjust.works
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    52 months ago

    I try to buy things on GOG when I can just for the sake of diversifying my dependence on one company.

    There are plenty of guides to setting up Heroic Launcher on the Deck. Once its set up, it’s easy to install games.

    I’ve found GOG games to run perfectly fine, and cloud saves work perfectly.

    Lastly, I saw some other people saying GOG doesn’t have the latest version of this game specifically, so definitely check that before buying.

  • Last time I checked (and it’s been a few months), GOG hadn’t updated their version of FO4 with the “next-gen” update that came out early this year. That may be a good thing or a bad thing depending on your perspective because supposedly the update breaks a lot of mods but also is supposed to increase performance.

  • @Auster@lemm.ee
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    32 months ago

    As much as GOG/CD Projekt have more than their fair share of problems, usually their versions of games work, can be preserved, don’t require as much bloat, launchers included, and usually don’t require 3rd party validation. And like others said, besides Wine and related, and installing through Steam as external games, you can also install stuff very easily through Heroic and the sort. So I’d say it’s the better option indeed.

  • Hello_there
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    22 months ago

    I don’t how easy it is to install non steam games. I know it’s possible but takes some more messing around.