Today’s GOG was originally known as Good Old Games years ago, but in 2012 it was also focused on current games, taking the name GOG. In fact, it never disrupted the idea, all the games it sold were DRM-free, but therefore it was unlikely to get attention especially in our country because it did not do regional pricing. After all, you know the state of the exchange rates.
GOG announced today that they will return to their origins, that classic games have a different place in their hearts and that they will do more to bring them to the fore. “Our goal is once again to make GOG the best venue for classic PC games,” the blog post says.
This, of course, does not mean that new games will be removed from gog pages, but classic games will be more visible, and the first step will be to highlight the Good Old Games concept. More than 450 games are now available to players in visible form on the pages of games collected under the Good Old Games tag . The list includes time-defying classics such as Heroes of Might and Magic 3, Planescape: Torment, System Shock 2, Blade Runner.
“Our job is not just to re-launch games that are already in the market. Making them playable for everyone – fixing them and making sure they work in the modern systems you have,” says GOG.
And if they could solve this regional price thing, then it would be great, but unfortunately it is not possible to get close to some classic games.