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GOG have expanded their Linux DRM free game library again. It's a pretty good selection of games this time around too!

Interstellaria
Command a fleet of vessels wandering the galaxy for adventure and profit! You’ll be forced to make tough decisions as you face hostile starships, crippling space anomalies, and intriguing aliens. When your fleet faces certain doom, should you direct your crew to make critical repairs, or report to their stations and boost your fleet?

Breach & Clear
Build your Special Operations team, plan and execute advanced missions, and own every angle.
Choose your real-world squad -- US Army Rangers, Germany's KSK, Canada’s JTF2, UK SAS, and more -- and take on a variety of foes with different skill-sets and abilities. Learn to approach, engage, and dominate your opponents through superior tactics and training.

Breach and Clear: Deadline - Brand new game, only just came out
A deadly new breed of human monster is on the rise, and it’s up to you to stop the infestation before it spreads. Breach & Clear: DEADline is the all-new follow up to Breach & Clear, the critically acclaimed and commercially successful hybrid tactical strategy game. The game gives you real-time control over a squad of four elite Special Forces tasked with tracking down information on the source of the infestation.

Note: We will have some thoughts up on Deadline shortly, as it's a new game and GOG gave us a key.

Call of Cthulhu: Prisoner of Ice (DOSBox)
Amid an atmosphere of suspense and intrigue you'll launch your voyage in the icy cold wastelands of the Antarctic aboard a Royal Navy submarine - the H.M.S. Victoria. As an American agent of the Office of Naval Intelligence, your mission is to thwart a Nazi plot and recover top secret cargo. Horrific creatures capable of shifting the balance of world power must be conquered. World War II looms ahead and your every move could change the course of history.

Call of Cthulhu: Shadow of the Comet (DOSBox)
You'll take on the role of John T. Carter, a brilliant young astronomer, piecing together the puzzling history of the village and its cryptic inhabitants. Incredibly realistic action and supernatural chaos intertwine to draw players deep into the puzzling mysteries within the Shadow of the Comet.

TIS-100
TIS-100 is an open-ended programming game by Zachtronics, the creators of SpaceChem and Infinifactory, in which you rewrite corrupted code segments to repair the TIS-100 and unlock its secrets. It’s the assembly language programming game you never asked for! Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: DRM-Free, GOG
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throgh Jul 23, 2015
Ah also just to mention: FEIST is out and very beautiful. ^_^
muntdefems Jul 23, 2015
Quoting: Crazy PenguinNice article, but may be you should extend it by games which GOG hasn't released this week. There we have NOT on GOG but on Steam:
- Cities in Motion Collection
- Metro 2033: Redux
- Metro Last Light Redux

Yep, this has been a really bittersweet week with regard to Linux releases on GOG. However I think Metro: Last Light Redux was released some time ago and only the 2033 Redux has come out this week.

But you missed KoTOR2 in your list, so that evens it out I guess. :P
muntdefems Jul 23, 2015
Quoting: Shmerl
Quoting: Guest
Quoting: ShmerlThat makes sense to me. If you don't have technical issues, why should they refund you? I can understand cases "I bought a wrong game by mistake", but it's very easy to abuse. If I were GOG, I'd make exactly the same refund policy as they did.
Great, have fun with your crappy and broken games. Me I’ll buy on Steam.

Broken games means you have technical issues. If your issues aren't technical, you games can't be broken. You contradict yourself.

Agreed, but you haven't addressed crappy games. With physical products, in most places you're entitled to a refund if said product doesn't live up to your expectations for whatever reason, so stan's expectation is not completely unreasonable. However it all gets tricky when digital goods are involved, and more so on GOG where DRM-free downloads are one of its foundational characteristics. Steam can more or less get away with it since after a refund you lose access to the game (and still the system can be abused quite easily), but I honestly cannot see any way GOG could improve its refund policy -- which is already very good and antedated Steam's by a long time.


Last edited by muntdefems on 23 July 2015 at 8:28 pm UTC
throgh Jul 23, 2015
That's the price of DRM-free. And I don't see another solution for this. So from my point of view it's the best solution we could get out there. In times of digital video platforms there are enough information potential. Otherwise there could some possibility of demonstrations. But these should be done by the developer or publisher and is no problem of the platform itself. GOG has done a wonderful job until now in times where software got more boundaries than ever before!
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