BioShock Remastered: - D2NLA6C3DB¿¿¿E29A5
Dishonored: Definitive Edition - K5¿¿¿899F71F77657F
Plague: A Tale of Innocence - Y5BWC5EBFD¿¿¿¿CE4C
BioShock - ¿¿¿ = 384
Dishonored - ¿¿¿ = XMB
Plague: ¿¿¿¿ = 0348
Comment has been collapsed.
Chasm: The Rift - Amazon Prime
BW5H0E0A35D478EE50
Blade of Darkness - Amazon Prime
83U9D93F7BF3B88E0A
Hell Pie - Amazon Prime
BE7C5FF2110ED4D0F8
Dishonored - Definitive Edition - Amazon Prime
K5XMC587E9F9E18AE4
The Falconeer - Amazon Prime
4VDE61113729B74A0C
Tomb Raider: Anniversary - Amazon Prime
PDRB53FBE7E91E7219
Ghost Song - Amazon Prime
EUFL63CBF1AD375738
DREDGE.
E2DY350BADAC3800BB
Duck Paradox - Amazon Prime
FV27BDEC032A7DC774
Close To The Sun - Amazon Prime
F7LZ684C3ABE4914C2
Monster Train - Amazon Prime
2Z6Q3028BD1F1F367E
Coromon - Amazon Prime
SLNQ9C7B7B221031E2
Comment has been collapsed.
I suppose it's already gone? 🤔
Assuming it's first come, first serve, it's "gone" indeed.
Comment has been collapsed.
Bioshock 2 remastered gog key: MPLL48F2B4A0E12323
First come first served.
Comment has been collapsed.
Also these two, not sure they still work, please give them a try:
Fallout gog key: M8AR2CADF57AF2B3DD
Fallout 2 gog key: DGY56CA5AFB1AE68E3
Comment has been collapsed.
Comment has been collapsed.
Comment has been collapsed.
You replied to the thread, you should reply to this post instead: https://www.steamgifts.com/go/comment/Fjaeitg
Comment has been collapsed.
Just wondering, do you people prefer the Info part having Steam Link to check Game Info, or its own platform link (Like Epic Games, GOG) to check info and also if you own the game on those platforms?
Comment has been collapsed.
I've noticed that system requirements can be a bit more trustworthy on GOG than on Steam sometimes, or at least I haven't seen such obvious wild guesses by the devs on GOG as it can happen with small indie titles on Steam, my guess is that the GOG staff is a bit more strict with the technical side of things.
I get why it happens from a developer's side because extensive testing is sometimes just not an option but as a consumer it's so frustrating when go to read the system requirements and it's a transparent case of "it runs fine on my set up".
Comment has been collapsed.
I don't know about GOG being more accurate on tech specs for systems or not but I have noticed that a lot of 'game developers' stress systems needlessly by not understanding the intricacies of programming or the engines they are using to create their games.
It looks like a poor care of asset management over abstract concept in many cases. A game like Sunset, for example, over what would be (In my opinion) a better game for over a decade earlier like XIII.. For the first example you'd need the highest end system available at launch to play a mediocre (At best) game whilst with the latter you'd need to limit even the simplest system running a modern operating system to have an awesome experience.
While Sunset may be more of a high end abstract artistic experience over a 'game' like XIII (And perhaps that's why GOG doesn't list it in it's inventory) and as the Steam database shows Sunset has had few players at its peak than XIII has had on its worst day this is not public art being reviewed. This is a system required to pay for something which considers itself art over the ability to access it or enjoy the experience.
So, in short, proper games developers will make a great game which runs on the most systems available to them at launch. Questionable 'developers' will not understand the process of compiling or making a game which people want to play.
To this end Steam is a better platform for a wider range of 'gaming' experiences whereas GOG is better for actual games.
The archives will show what worked and what didn't and the people reading those can make up their own minds based on what they know.
Comment has been collapsed.
That is true, but I was thinking about a much simpler thing to be honest, like how some devs literally just copy paste their own rig's specs and call it a day or throw one of those vague "anything recent will do" in the description as if that was useful to anyone but themselves (who knows what they consider "recent").
It's not rare to find games that run perfectly fine in systems that don't meet the minimum requirements just as it isn't rare to also find games that run like crap (but technically run) at minimum specs.
Now about the issue of horrendous lack of optimization, I blame modern engines. It's true that they have made game making a much easier endeavor, it's evident by the sheer number of games that come out these days on an almost daily basis, but by god Unity and Unreal can run like crap sometimes. They keep adding incredibly demanding visual features with fuck all in terms of optimization and expect that devs will be the ones to keep that nonsense under control.
But yeah from what little I know I've seen devs that have no clue of how to follow reasonable programming practices. And I do remember how back when it came out Sunset was a poster child for games that definitely shouldn't run so poorly given the context of what they're doing from a technical point of view.
But I don't have the heart to simply disregard shoddily put together games because sometimes a janky AF piece of software can be such a charming experience if you put up with its technical quirks, games that barely hold themselves together but are a really neat experience when they're working properly. I love adventure games and indie platformers and those are genres with a tendency to by done in a less than perfect way but sometimes I do like them regardless, I remember a hidden object game that turned the screen red and crashed the OS but I still liked it and have recommended it.
Comment has been collapsed.
Sometimes glitches in games are what make them the best!
The spinning guard glitch for Goldeneye on the N64 spawned a whole community of fun :)
I never fault a game for being made. But made well is always different from simply being made.
Perhaps in a year or so developers might understand that a chef doesn't just stick to traditional ingredients and microwave them to make a good meal. Games have always been a little rock and roll, from poking the source code before it goes into assembly or modifying sprites and changing the game to look differently. It's about the enjoyability and the story really. If they can make a game which is fun to play then people will play it.
Comments on Steam tend to give me the best and worst easily and if it's worthwhile I'll look elsewhere :)
Comment has been collapsed.
Got it, guess Steam wins XD
So remaining like this for future postings.
Comment has been collapsed.
Comment has been collapsed.
15 Comments - Last post 22 seconds ago by Phantomreader42
8 Comments - Last post 1 minute ago by thoughtfulhippo
2,134 Comments - Last post 13 minutes ago by Axelflox
30 Comments - Last post 18 minutes ago by Carenard
16 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by lostsoul67
688 Comments - Last post 4 hours ago by Bum8ara5h
103 Comments - Last post 4 hours ago by Reidor
85 Comments - Last post 2 minutes ago by Kyog
0 Comments - Created 4 minutes ago by ViToos
195 Comments - Last post 5 minutes ago by zobuk
72 Comments - Last post 24 minutes ago by stlpaul
177 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by mmm29
50 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by Myklex
17,226 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by MjrPITA
Work In Progress for most things, but would like to appreciate all people who helped creating this.
Currently taking all previous works #1 & #2 & #3 from @typjk & @MetalfanBlackness & @Felldrizzle to see how to continue their work.
Amazon Prime Gaming offers free games for Epic/GOG/Amazon platform and more per month..
Requires Amazon Prime and a Twitch account linked. (More instructions here)
For Games from Amazon Prime platform, you need the Amazon Games App.
🚨 Important
DO NOT CREATE giveaways for keys that are not for Steam as this is not allowed as stated in the guidelines.
New added Freebies will be having 🆕 at the title part
📆 Current Freebies|Updated #250123
🔮 Upcoming Freebie
📒 Placeholder
🔚 Expired Freebies Archive
Comment has been collapsed.