Posted March 01, 2025
After the great Lego reveal yesterday, I thought that perhaps GOG might indeed be making progress in terms of preservation and compatibility. After having purchased them all, however, I realized that this isn't the case. Take Lego City Undercover for instance. It is identical in form and function to the STEAM version replete with performance issues, CTDs, low FPS, etc. Mind you, there is and has been a fix for these issues since 2017 and is known as Lego City Recovered. I applied that fix, and now we are good to go. So, again, what is the point of the program if you are still releasing buggy titles that don't function as intended and need work immediately after purchase? If it is a legal issue of including patches or mods, then GOG should at least include instructions on how to modify these titles.
To me, it seems like a bunch of hot air and meaningless marketing. What do you think? I mean...there is Dino Crisis, and the RE series.....but do those justify the whole nothingness of this preservation program? Keep in mind as well, GOG keeps releasing games that don't exactly work. Take Quantic Dreams for an example. Good luck playing Heavy Rain. I guess what I'm asking is do you believe there is any real merit to this program, or is it simply marketing BS while continuing to be the same old GOG? I'll let you guys mull it over. At the end of the day...it just seems like the same old practices as ever. If GOG says they support these titles in that manner, I can almost confidently assume that they will be using PCGAMINGWIKI and STEAM forums to answer the questions they receive about issues just as we do as customers. On the other hand, perhaps preserving a game with all the errors, bugs, and glitches as it was initially released is the actual promise of the preservation program.
To me, it seems like a bunch of hot air and meaningless marketing. What do you think? I mean...there is Dino Crisis, and the RE series.....but do those justify the whole nothingness of this preservation program? Keep in mind as well, GOG keeps releasing games that don't exactly work. Take Quantic Dreams for an example. Good luck playing Heavy Rain. I guess what I'm asking is do you believe there is any real merit to this program, or is it simply marketing BS while continuing to be the same old GOG? I'll let you guys mull it over. At the end of the day...it just seems like the same old practices as ever. If GOG says they support these titles in that manner, I can almost confidently assume that they will be using PCGAMINGWIKI and STEAM forums to answer the questions they receive about issues just as we do as customers. On the other hand, perhaps preserving a game with all the errors, bugs, and glitches as it was initially released is the actual promise of the preservation program.
Post edited March 01, 2025 by RizzoCuoco