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Recently, GOG added the Windows version of XCOM: Enemy Unknown to their store and since it has a Linux version on Steam, I reached out to the porter to see about their plans for the Linux version.

We've seen a lot of speculation in the past, with people wondering if Feral Interactive will ever get their Linux ports onto a store other than Steam. Here's their official stance, which they sent me this morning:

We don't have any plans to distribute our games through GoG. If this changes, we'll make announcements through our usual channels. 

We can speculate all we like as to why they're not doing it, even if the decision does strike me as a little odd. Hopefully they will reevaluate this stance in future, considering it's not exactly a new game and the Linux port from 2014 isn't exactly new either.

A shame for everyone who prefers their games on GOG.

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Adamfx990 Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: Shmerl
Quoting: GuestTry as you might, there's nothing to indicate Feral's DRM stance one way or another.

If that's not clear still, I'll repeat but one last time, since I said it several times already. If Feral have an issue with GOG in particular, they can release the game through other means DRM-free, smaller companies than them do it just fine, it's not an insurmountable task. Feral aren't interested. Argue all you want, but until I'll see their games DRM-free anywhere, I'll consider them being pro-DRM.

Quoting: GuestIn fact, if Feral even talked to GOG, that indicates Feral are ok without DRM - they have to be, if they're willing to even talk to GOG.

Talks in such case are initiated by GOG, since GOG naturally don't like making crippled releases. GOG Linux team said so explicitly. But talks didn't lead anywhere as we can see.

The thing is, I never said it wasn't user friendly. I said its anti-consumer. As in, there a lots of aspects, like DRM and the fact that they just let literally anything onto the platform. User friendliness is a different matter all together. Though I'd still argue GOG is better in that regard as well.
Sputnik_tr_02 Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: GuestI don't care anymore for GOG, bought way too many games there in the hope that there will be a Linux client. But so far I cannot see that GOG is in any way committed to Linux. Valve and Feral continue to invest in Linux and I'm quite happy to support both companies.
Yes my thoughts exactly. Both Valve and Feral do more than just selling Linux games; they contribute to the open source drivers and Vulkan api and other cross platform solutions, but somehow they are the bad guys just because they use DRM and GOG is the good guy despite doing nothing but sell some games. I would also prefer DRM free where it is available but I do not live in Europe or USA and that makes GOG not viable because they do not support my local currency and because of that games on GOG are 3-4 times more expensive than on Steam. That would be another factor for some developers not putting their games on GOG because of user base being smaller.
bolokanar Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: TheSHEEEPYeah, I also don't get the problems people have with Steam.
"You need to have Steam open and running to play the games!" - So I open Steam and run the game. No problem here. In addition to an inbuilt chat, I also get an inbuilt browser, community, workshop... all of which is optional, of course.

You fail to see the technical side of things. Like the requirement to have 32bit, just to play your 64bit games.
And I know you have nothing against that. No need to tell me.

Time and again, I've seen sheepies do unreasonable stuff only on the will of the shepherd.
when they have realised what had happend, they would probably swear the shepherd if they could.
But what does it matter? In the end we ate The sheep.

By the way, you all have forgotten that you could actually play all this games on Windows… to begin with.
I see no one condemning, all the demand to get game X on GNU/Linux.


Last edited by bolokanar on 19 June 2018 at 9:18 am UTC
johndoe Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: HamishWhat a horrifyingly narrow world you must live in if the only games you feel comfortable playing are new. I don't know about you, but I fully intend to still be playing the games I buy today for at least as far into the future as the childhood favourites I still find myself coming back to year after year. That is why anything that is specifically designed to block me from doing so is completely unacceptable to me.

Technical challenges can be overcome. DRM legally cannot.

No, you misunderstood me. The most important word in my phrase is MORE.

"It makes MORE sense to play games when they are new and active." does not mean that I don't play old games or that I'm not comfortable with them.
I earn my money with Linux.

WAITING for a game that might never release DRM-FREE but is available for my beloved OS does also make not MUCH sense to ME.
Whitewolfe80 Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: Shmerl
Quoting: orochi_kyoIt so easy to come here and sound like a popular guy between these selfish human beings who thinks devs doesnt have the right to have a minimal protection of their intellectual property.

I'm not interested disproving this nonsense for the Nth time already. I'll just sum up key points:

1. DRM doesn't protect any property, but it violates users' rights because it's unethical overreaching preemptive policing.
2. Reasons for using DRM aren't related to increasing sales, because in practice DRM only decreases them.

Yes but i can tell you immediately why DRM exists, Companies like money staff are fond of being paid too. If you release a game drm free on gog i can tell you for a fact it is up on torrent sites day and date and yes even the linux version have been going up lately too. I know this as one of the parts of my job is to monitor several torrenting severs to see what has been uploaded and how often and when gog launch a new game it typically gets uped exactly 5 hours after being avilable for purchase.


Last edited by Whitewolfe80 on 19 June 2018 at 9:35 am UTC
Imants Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: Whitewolfe80
Quoting: Shmerl
Quoting: orochi_kyoIt so easy to come here and sound like a popular guy between these selfish human beings who thinks devs doesnt have the right to have a minimal protection of their intellectual property.

I'm not interested disproving this nonsense for the Nth time already. I'll just sum up key points:

1. DRM doesn't protect any property, but it violates users' rights because it's unethical overreaching preemptive policing.
2. Reasons for using DRM aren't related to increasing sales, because in practice DRM only decreases them.

Yes but i can tell you immediately why DRM exists, Companies like money staff are fond of being paid too. If you release a game drm free on gog i can tell you for a fact it is up on torrent sites day and date and yes even the linux version have been going up lately too. I know this as one of the parts of my job is to monitor several torrenting severs to see what has been uploaded and how often and when gog launch a new game it typically gets uped exactly 5 hours after being avilable for purchase.

Does DRM really prevents games from pirating? Or it just helps them not to be pirated after 5 hours or so but little bit longer?
FutureSuture Jun 19, 2018
I can only hope that that changes. I was looking forward to getting the Tomb Raider and XCOM games that have Linux clients provided by Feral on GOG.
Cyba.Cowboy Jun 19, 2018
That's a shame... These days I rarely buy games on Steam, and buy them almost exclusively on GOG.com (mostly because of the DRM-free/standalone game thing).

Hopefully Feral change their mind at some point, because they have a number of games I wouldn't mind purchasing...
Jahimself Jun 19, 2018
I also prefer DRM free games in general. I think it is the best for consumers. It is quite similar to owning a DVD, or music CD, which you can carry anywhere, and copy for yourself to avoid damaging the CD. You can also lend it to someone. For me the GOG way is what suit the best what you do in reality with objects that you purchase.

Nontheless, for now Feral can not cover the cost of doing so. Even releassing a game on steam with all the advantages of it is not always worthy to cover the salary of their engineers. For instance they could not release F1 2016, probably because F2015 was not viable financially.

For them, choosing the game must be quite a bargain, because the game has to please the community as much as possible, but also to sell enough to pay the porter a wage.

Don't forget that they port a game with a team that is often 100 time smaller than the big editors. It is huge lot of work, and honestly the work is of incredible quality.

In France we have a saying which says: "Little by little, the bird makes its nest" and I think that is exactly what Feral Interactive is trying to do, and the best they can. So for now, indeed the situation is not perfect, we have to get our community growing in order for them to later be able to reach the DRM goal.

It's a personnal explanation, but I'm quite confident they are linux lovers as we all are here., and that they probably agree with what the majority of us think of DRM-free games.


Last edited by Jahimself on 19 June 2018 at 11:28 am UTC
adamhm Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: Whitewolfe80Yes but i can tell you immediately why DRM exists, Companies like money staff are fond of being paid too. If you release a game drm free on gog i can tell you for a fact it is up on torrent sites day and date and yes even the linux version have been going up lately too. I know this as one of the parts of my job is to monitor several torrenting severs to see what has been uploaded and how often and when gog launch a new game it typically gets uped exactly 5 hours after being avilable for purchase.

Steam's DRM does next to nothing to prevent piracy either, especially in the form as implemented by most developers (i.e. without using CEG, but even when that is used it still doesn't slow the hackers down much). A common way to neuter it is to simply create a custom steam_api.dll/libsteam_api.so that implements a fake version of the Steam API.

This method actually seems to be used quite regularly for GOG re-releases of former Steamworks titles and from what I've read about the GOG version of XCOM:EU I'm guessing it's also the method used for that.

The real question though is: does DRM actually help sales? Because from all of the information I've seen, even when it's effective at stopping piracy for long periods like Denuvo has been this does not translate into an improvement in sales figures.
Beamboom Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: ShmerlWhat this is about is convenience and user rights. DRM is user rights' hostile by definition. It also degrades some user experiences in different ways.

There's a lot I could have commented here, but I think the above quote well represent the core of the argument. And I disagree with it, if - IF - we keep this in the context of Steam.

First off: User rights. What user rights are violated here? It's not even clear to me if we talk about "rights" from a legal or moral perspective. If you guys talk morally, I'm off that part of discussion. But if we talk legally, then I'd really love to see what exact right are breached here?

Secondly: Convenience and hostility. What is it about the Steam way of doing DRM that is so hostile? From a purely practical point of view - what's the inconvenience? Heck - I got around three hundred games on Steam, some of them with the DRM implemented, others without (they can be run outside the steam client) - and I can't even tell what games do indeed have any DRM implemented. How the heck do I even find out, without trying to actually run them outside? And THAT, my friends, are the level of transparancy we talk about here. We can't bloody tell if it's there or not!

And finally, I'll round this up with a sweet little recent example of bad DRM. A couple of weeks ago I tried to watch a blu-ray. I could not watch that film - who I legally bought - without me going to some website and receive a code, to then insert into a screen on my tv with the remote control. There were some hassle with that too, because we weere sitting there with our mobiles, trying to press a code into a form on a website not optimised for mobile screens, then my blu-ray player is so critically underpowered that it actually became a lagfest to insert that bloody code we got in return, and by the time we got past this we lost ALL will to watch that bloody movie.

Now THAT is bad DRM. That is not user friendly. That is punishing legal customers for what others do.
But Steam? They are the good guys in this scenario.
Shmerl Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: Whitewolfe80Yes but i can tell you immediately why DRM exists, Companies like money staff are fond of being paid too. If you release a game drm free on gog i can tell you for a fact it is up on torrent sites day and date and yes even the linux version have been going up lately too. I know this as one of the parts of my job is to monitor several torrenting severs to see what has been uploaded and how often and when gog launch a new game it typically gets uped exactly 5 hours after being avilable for purchase.

Surprise, even if you release it with DRM, it will be still on torrent trackers, with that DRM removed. So pirates aren't affected by it and DRM only hurts legitimate users. It's one of the stupidest ideas ever (to treat your own customers like that), but it's not done for business reasons. It's a crooked control scheme which has nothing to do with piracy.

Quoting: adamhmThe real question though is: does DRM actually help sales? Because from all of the information I've seen, even when it's effective at stopping piracy for long periods like Denuvo has been this does not translate into an improvement in sales figures.

Nope, DRM directly translates into lost sales.


Last edited by Shmerl on 19 June 2018 at 1:26 pm UTC
TheSHEEEP Jun 19, 2018
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Quoting: sbolokanov
Quoting: TheSHEEEPYeah, I also don't get the problems people have with Steam.
"You need to have Steam open and running to play the games!" - So I open Steam and run the game. No problem here. In addition to an inbuilt chat, I also get an inbuilt browser, community, workshop... all of which is optional, of course.

You fail to see the technical side of things. Like the requirement to have 32bit, just to play your 64bit games.
And I know you have nothing against that. No need to tell me.
You mean having a few libraries available in 32bit to run Steam? The horror!
The other way around might be problematic for a few people with ancient rigs, but certainly not this.
Sorry, I have an actual life and simply can't be bothered by trivial nonsense like that.

Besides, it would be silly to assume Steam won't upgrade to 64bit eventually.

Quoting: sbolokanovTime and again, I've seen sheepies do unreasonable stuff only on the will of the shepherd.
when they have realised what had happend, they would probably swear the shepherd if they could.
But what does it matter? In the end we ate The sheep.
A whole paragraph comitted to my nick.
Never seen that before.
So creative.
You should write a book. And fewer forum posts.

Quoting: sbolokanovBy the way, you all have forgotten that you could actually play all this games on Windows… to begin with.
I see no one condemning, all the demand to get game X on GNU/Linux.
That's true. And I do.
At least those games that do not run natively or via Wine. Thankfully, both Windows and linux boot so fast by now, switching isn't really much of a loss any more.


Last edited by TheSHEEEP on 19 June 2018 at 1:52 pm UTC
Ryblade Jun 19, 2018
Maybe it's because GOG still has their heads up their butts when it comes to supporting Linux and its users. Maybe it's because Feral doesn't want to have to hold GOG's hand in supporting an operating system that GOG can barely understand themselves. Maybe it's because they don't want to be treated as if they don't know better than GOG when it comes to simple issues, such as how to sanely package software without resorting to forcibly shoving binary data onto the end of a shell script like it's some sort of virus. Maybe it's because JudasIscariot can be painfully arrogant and belligerant when told he's not doing things correctly.

I find dealing with GOG to be a pain to deal with and I'm just a user. I'd hate to be an actual developer and have to put up with their constant, neverending nonsense. At least with Steam it feels like Valve has a bit more respect for us Linux users. They try harder. They develop, maintain and support Linux games, APIs and tools, a distribution client and even a freaking distro. They have a personal vested interest in Linux. To GOG, Linux is this mystical, strange thing sitting on a cobweb-ridden box in the darkest corner of their office that only gets booted up when we whine hard enough.
Dolus Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: Whitewolfe80
Quoting: Shmerl
Quoting: orochi_kyoIt so easy to come here and sound like a popular guy between these selfish human beings who thinks devs doesnt have the right to have a minimal protection of their intellectual property.

I'm not interested disproving this nonsense for the Nth time already. I'll just sum up key points:

1. DRM doesn't protect any property, but it violates users' rights because it's unethical overreaching preemptive policing.
2. Reasons for using DRM aren't related to increasing sales, because in practice DRM only decreases them.

Yes but i can tell you immediately why DRM exists, Companies like money staff are fond of being paid too. If you release a game drm free on gog i can tell you for a fact it is up on torrent sites day and date and yes even the linux version have been going up lately too. I know this as one of the parts of my job is to monitor several torrenting severs to see what has been uploaded and how often and when gog launch a new game it typically gets uped exactly 5 hours after being avilable for purchase.

There is no evidence that piracy does anything to negatively effect the overall profit margins with most games. Hell, there is some evidence of the opposite. All DRM is, is a safety blanket for investors and suites.
namiko Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: RybladeMaybe it's because JudasIscariot can be painfully arrogant and belligerant when told he's not doing things correctly.
I really hated that guy. He felt like the PR guy who drew the shortest straw and was told "just keep 'em happy, and don't directly promise anything we can't deliver on".

If he's any indicator of what the rest of the developers who want to put a Linux port of a game on GOG is like, no wonder Feral may have balked at it. Treat people a little more like intelligent beings and not just a tiny group of that need to be appeased every once in a while to keep them around. I won't kiss the foot that keeps kicking me, it's abusive. (Not implying anything about the law here, it was just a matter of self-respect.)

Even if Steam's staff don't speak directly to us as often, at least they've gone all in on Linux instead of this half-assed toe-dipping shit.

Finally, maybe Feral didn't want to work with GOG because their own newest games don't even have a Linux port? Or their client? Even itch.io has a Linux client and I'm sure their user share is miniscule for Linux in comparison to Steam *and* GOG!

If I were Feral, I'd see GOG as not being serious as a company when it comes to Linux. That's what I believe.
Mountain Man Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: GustyGhostGosh, I haven't bought a Feral game since... Warhammer? And on Warhammer they failed to make the online component cross platform even. I have since cleansed nasty DRM out of my life so bhttps://www.gamingonlinux.com/forum/topic/3262/post_id=15363ye bye Steam. Feral if you want me to buy your games you're going to have to loosen that death grip.
The lack of cross platform multiplayer has nothing to do with DRM and is entirely because of the fact that the Windows version uses proprietary math libraries that are not available for Linux or OSX, and without an identical math library in all versions, you will get sync issues in multiplayer. So blame Creative Assembly for that one.
Shmerl Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: namikoFinally, maybe Feral didn't want to work with GOG because their own newest games don't even have a Linux port? Or their client? Even itch.io has a Linux client and I'm sure their user share is miniscule for Linux in comparison to Steam *and* GOG!

Do you see Feral games on itch.io? Feral don't release their games DRM-free anywhere, not just on GOG.
Mountain Man Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: johndoe
Quoting: Avehicle7887In my opinion there's the most important thing - Ownership.

Games that require Steam running to play are more of a longtime lease than something you actually own. I buy my games DRM-Free because I can play them anytime and anywhere without depending on any service.

What will you do with all your collected games in ten years when no Linux distro ships the old libs it needs to run?
Sure there are some great games that can be played/replayed many times. But these ones normally get remastered at some point of time.
I personally think it's a waste of time and resources to collect games for longer than "a long time lease".
This is where I fall on this debate: If people are worried about game preservation then the warez community already has us covered. For example, people who still have a working Commodore 64 and stack of floppy disks to play their favorite games from decades ago are likely few and far between, but hundreds of Commodore 64 games are available online and can be played with an emulator. Now I am generally opposed to piracy, so I find it ironic that a vast majority of these classic games would no longer exist if it wasn't for the warez community.

All this is to say that if your "lease" ever runs out on Steam then the games you paid for will still be available in one form or another.
hummer010 Jun 19, 2018
Quoting: BeamboomWhat is it about the Steam way of doing DRM that is so hostile? From a purely practical point of view - what's the inconvenience?

You've obviously never been anywhere that you didn't have internet, and Steam refused to start in Offline mode. It's rather inconvenient to not be able to play any games that require the client.
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