GOG’s Dreamlist is doing what it can to preserve video games


When most people hear the words “CD Projekt Red,” what first comes to mind are the two best role-playing games in the last decade – The Witcher 3 and Cyberpunk 2077. This is especially true for the PC platform, as most copies of both games sold are through PC storefronts (such as Steam). But CD Projekt directly owns one of those storefronts, known as Good Old Games (or GOG for short). This storefront is famous for its DRM-free ownership of games you purchase through it. What this means is that when a game is downloaded through GOG, there is no obligatory internet handshake to boot it up (like the good old days).

This approach to digital distribution flies in the face of many other storefronts like Steam that do require that internet handshake (even for single-player games). What GOG achieves in this approach is allowing players to preserve their games traditionally — as physical media for games on PC are mostly gone — leaving many classics behind in a similar way to many games were left behind after the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 console generation.



Source link

Previous articlePresident Trump’s Truth.Fi Plans to Launch ‘Bitcoin Plus’ ETF
Next articleBitcoin Price Analysis: Rollercoaster Fluctuations as Key Support Faces Ultimate Test – Bitcoin.com News