I have read it runs fine on steam but would rather buy it on GOG due to the lack of DRM.

30 points

I thought this way in the beginning, but the way gog never even built a Linux client while valve literally made Linux a viable gaming platform from proton to steam deck, I buy all my games from steam now.

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23 points

@nieceandtows Yeah, I love GOG’s DRM-free ethos and I’d love to support them, but they sure don’t seem interested in supporting me.

I’d like for Steam to have good competition because monoculture is bad and competition is good for everybody. But if you’re a Linux gamer, nobody else compares to Valve.

Itch.io is really the only other game store that shows anything like Valve’s level of support for Linux, and it’s great but it’s not a Steam competitor.

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9 points

True. Linux client is a must for me. Their Windows launcher is kinda crap too. It has so much focus on trying to get all your games in one launcher but it’s not great as a launcher for any platform…

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2 points

So, do you use Lutris instead?

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2 points

I use Windows on Desktop and I use Steam Deck OS on my Steam Deck. On my Deck I usually just don’t play GOG games lol

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19 points

From what I’ve heard, the Steam version also lacks DRM. Once you’ve downloaded it you can close Steam and just launch the game with the exe. Obviously GOG or Steam is still handy for updates.

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6 points
*

Updates are the main reason I stick with Steam. If GOG Galaxy worked on Linux, I’d probably buy a lot more from them.

But for something like this that’s likely to get more frequent updates, I’ll stick to Steam.

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14 points

I link my GoG account to Heroic Launcher. It works just fine, updates included, store front included. I’m on Nobara Linux.

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6 points

Yes, I have Heroic installed as well on my desktop and Steam Deck, but that’s third party support, not first class support. First class support to me means they’re investing in my platform, which is important to me.

So most of my purchases go to Steam, because Steam supports Linux as a first class platform. Because if this, they make an effort to get games supported on Linux (either through Proton or natively), and that’s really valuable to me.

I’m not expecting Steam-level of support, but I do expect a little more than just making binaries available through the web interface. I’ll occasionally buy from GOG, but until they decide to actually support Linux, I’ll keep buying most of my games from Steam.

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1 point

Could they not just support the Heroic Game Launcher and call it official? That’s what I’d do. By support I mean mostly financial.

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1 point

Sure! But by support I mean:

  • officially link to it and offer some level of customer support
  • at least financially contribute to it, and perhaps provide dev resources as well
  • provide Heroic developers access to pre-release versions of any new API they introduce so support could theoretically land day 1

But not being hostile toward it is not enough for me to call it “support,” so I’m going to feel like a second-class citizen until GOG does something official.

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3 points

That’s good to know, my sons were interested in it, now we can all have a good gaming session together before they decide if they want to buy it. Sadly there is no PS5 cross play (although saves can be linked) so I am going to have to buy the PS5 version to play with friends. Still I don’t mind giving Larian some more money as the game is just fantastic, relatively bug free and even performs pretty well on the steam deck.

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13 points

You should be able to add it to your steam library as a non-steam game and then in game options in Steam set up using Proton as long as you have Proton enabled for all games, not just verified games.

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12 points

I recommend Heroic Games Launcher for GOG games, it’s much nicer to use, IMO.

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6 points

You can log into GOG through Lutris too, and install and launch games through that.

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2 points

That doesn’t allow you to update the game though, so it doesn’t work out great for new games with frequent updates and a large download file size.

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4 points

I thought Heroic was an alternative launcher for Epic Games, I guess I didn’t consider that it would work for GOG games as well.

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3 points

Heroic supports Epic, GoG, and now Amazon games. Supports installs, updates, file validation, and uninstalls perfectly. I think for Epic it supports cloud saves as well, but I don’t use that feature and have heard horror stories from early adopters of it.

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2 points

They added support for gog platform for a while now.

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1 point

@rikudou @dingus I just posted my experiences using gog through heroic on this thread. I would appreciate your input.

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1 point

You didn’t post the error you’re getting.

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8 points

Plays fine for me on Arch using the wine-ge-custom AUR package on a WINEPREFIX set up with winetricks dxvk. I had a little bit more success with the _dx11 version for some odd reason.

BG3ModManager is… probably don’t try it just yet.

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5 points

I have it. Installed/updated using Heroic. Works perfectly. I use the latest Proton-GE with it, and run the Vulkan backend (seems to have fewer bugs for me on AMD GPU than the DX11 version).

Running the latest Mint with the 6.1 OEM kernel and kisak-mesa drivers.

My wife has it installed with Galaxy on Windows. DRM-free means we can play co-op over LAN instead of being stuck with split-screen.

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3 points

The steam version is also DRM free IIRC.

Why does that make you able to play co-op over LAN?

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1 point
*

Because she has my copy of the game installed on her PC too, so with one copy we’re able to play together on two different computers instead of sharing a screen.

The lack of DRM means GoG doesn’t care about whether I’m online on more than one PC. Steam does, meaning one of us would need to be in offline mode. In games that implement the Steam DRM this would mean that the person in offline mode wouldn’t be able to play multiplayer.

Apparently that isn’t the case with this game but I didn’t realize that.

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-1 points

The steam version is also DRM free IIRC.

steam IS drm…

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5 points

No, Steam is a store and a content delivery mechanism. It has the option to add DRM, which developers may choose to do, but don’t have to. There are games which can be purchased on Steam and which can be launched without the Steam client, just like any normal program.

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