• @acosmichippo
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      45 hours ago

      unless you keep the offline installers.

      • @Voyajer
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        74 hours ago

        I mean at that point you can just make backups of your steam games too. A lot work straight from the exe and for the rest there are steam simulators.

        • @[email protected]
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          123 minutes ago

          A small minority of GOG games have DRM, a majority of Steam games have a form of DRM. “Use a simulator” isn’t a solution, I shouldn’t need a third party program to play the games I paid for.

        • GHiLA
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          43 hours ago

          Well, gentlemen. I guess we got this all sorted out. Not a big deal, after all.

      • Fushuan [he/him]
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        53 hours ago

        If you back up the folder of a steam installed game that doesn’t need steam to run, what’s the difference?

        Owning the copy in a legal sense doesn’t affect most of the userbase tbh.

      • @radix
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        5 hours ago

        Legally, it’s still a license, it’s just effectively impossible to revoke.

        Edit to expand on this: A truly offline forever-purchase of physical goods can be re-sold. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-sale_doctrine (this is the US-specific version, other jurisdictions may have similar doctrines).

        American legal concept that limits the rights of an intellectual property owner to control resale of products embodying its intellectual property.

        A digital “purchase” is usually non-transferable, even from GOG. It can’t be removed from your own HDD once you download the installer, but there are still restrictions attached on what you can do with it, even if those are limited and hard to enforce.

        • @TheEntity
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          105 hours ago

          Just like any game ever sold on a CD.

          • @[email protected]
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            24 hours ago

            Technically, probably yes, but you can buy old, opened games on eBay. I doubt you can do the same with GOG games. Digital media is much harder if not impossible to resell.