this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2025
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Gaming
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No, they didn't. I can install the software I bought back in the day on the computers I bought it for, using the license key provided. GoG also famously uses a model where GoG does not care what OS you're using.
Lol, I'm a software developer that started by writing legacy windows software, I know exactly how much (little) has changed.
I don't care. They have the resources to support it.
Either strip the DRM out and pay whatever you have to to the publishers to do that, or keep supporting the systems you sold your software for.
The idea that Valve is blameless for shitty behaviour because other tech companies also do that shitty behaviour is nonsense. They have been the dominant platform forever, and have had an insane amount of resources available to them.
It is this perspective that exposes your bias and colors your perception.
We live in a post-Heartbleed world. We live in a post-UAC world. We constantly find new bugs and vulnerabilities, and they cannot always be patched without massive changes to the architecture. We cannot forever maintain old systems that cultivated bad habits in it's users.
Not all change is good, but all change is inevitable.
No that perspective is what makes me understand that when corporations talk about obsceleting things for security reasons, it's almost always not actually because of security, because it would be a little less profitable to continue support.
And Valve didnt have to build a business around always checking in DRM if they didn't want to support old clients, and they have more than enough resources to continue support.
Can I hold you to the decisions you made 20 years ago? I bought that program you built decades ago, that means I'm entitled to your continued support. And don't you even think about getting paid, your support should be free. You shouldn't have built and sold the software if you can't support it...
We're not talking about support, we're talking about not breaking the software we bought after the fact.
You literally did say support.
Yes, they can have their software continue to support Windows by simply not breaking the version that works for windows, without having to provide full customer support and service for it.
All software breaks.
False.
Denial.
Oh, so this whole situation is to a significant degree, your fault.
=P
I could have sworn their model was keeping old games updated to work functionally on newer hardware.
https://www.gog.com/en/gog-preservation-program
Yes, and thats literally completely irrelevant.
The fact that their games are DRM free means that doesn't matter one iota. If you buy a game from them on a set of hardware you'll be able to play it on that hardware forever, regardless of whether their desktop client changes.
But if they keep it updated for modern systems that means as time goes on the files they are offering to install... won't work on old hardware because they've been updated to the modern era.
Sure if you grab a file from them and never get a newer, more maintained version, it will play on exactly the hardware and software you had when you bought it... But if you lost the install file somehow and went to grab a new copy five years later the updated ones may no longer run on your old hardware
That's literally the entire point.
Also, they can still offer the olde versions of the file for download.
Except in a lot of cases they really don't.