olivier leroux wrote...
Btw, I don't remember but I'm curious - did we ever get any kind of official statement as to why the Premium modules can't be sold anymore and who owns the rights to them now?
I know I would still pay $5.99 for them if they were bundled as a release on GOG.com with the DRM removed, and I bet I'm not the only one. Who are those humble guys who apparantly don't want our money? Or who are still fighting over it? In any case, they already lost Zorgbert as a potential customer ... '>
The most annoying thing about it is to be left in dark for so long. >'>
Never red anything about those, Olivier, but I'm guessing with the authentication still built into the exe, it probably won't ever appear on GoG, sadly. Not unless GoG rewrites the exe to ignore the authentication, but I doubt they have either the right or the expertise to do that.
If anyone can ferret out how many copies of NWN have been sold via GoG that would be interesting to know. If it's less than 10K (which is probably a reasonable assumption), the sales is negligle compared to the sort of revenues these gaming vendors realize. $100K is chunk change when you are considering the global market so once it reaches a venue like GoG all they are interested in is gleaning a bit of "free" (i.e. unsupported) revenue... essentially a clean-up operation for out-dated software.
One thing I've noticed playing these DLs is that if you connect to allow the authentication to complete, you can unplug and run the Premiums locally for there on. Not sure if it will provide save games without a connection, though.
I, for one, would be more than willing to contribute to a fund where all those "legit" owners could apply for a partial refund by verifying their original purchase somehow. It only seems fair that dedicated fans should be proferred some consideration for their patronage. But what has "fair" got to do with this whole travesty?