Their tagline is literally ‘you buy it, you own it’. But does it really grants ownership?

  • village604@adultswim.fan
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    15 hours ago

    1.3 Also, when we’re talking about games, in-game content, virtual items or currency or GOG videos or other content or services which you can purchase or access via GOG services, we’ll just call them “GOG games” or “GOG videos” respectively and when we talk about them all together they are “GOG content”.

    • grue@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      Okay then, I guess GoG is lying the same way Steam is after all. I tried to give them the benefit of the doubt, but concede that I was wrong.

      “Licensed not sold” is still bunk, though. They do not have the right to confiscate games you’ve previously purchased, no matter what their fucking User Agreement claims.

      • village604@adultswim.fan
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        14 hours ago

        Their user agreement doesn’t claim they can remove files from your computer. If your account gets suspended you no longer have access to the game you paid for unless you have previously downloaded and stored it.

        I bought Witcher 3 on GOG, but I don’t currently have it saved anywhere. If GOG suspends my account, I can no longer access the content I paid for

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          12 hours ago

          Their user agreement doesn’t claim they can remove files from your computer.

          Then GOG must be restricting access only to the service itself, not to your property, despite what the text says.

          If GOG suspends my account, I can no longer access the content I paid for

          You still own the copy of the game; it’s hardly GOG’s fault if you lost or destroyed it.

          Expecting to have continued access to re-download indefinitely is like buying a physical book from a brick-and-mortar store, throwing it in the trash, and then expecting to be allowed to swing back by the place later to grab another copy off the shelf. Sure, it’d be nice if the store let you do that, but it would be silly to claim that not letting you do it somehow meant you never owned your copy of the book.