GOG has
Just Cause 2: Complete Edition (PC Digital Download) on sale for
$1.99.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
doublehelixx for finding this deal.
- Note: A GOG account is required to purchase this item (free to join). The game is DRM free and does not require the optional GOG Galaxy application to play.
Product Details:
- Dive into an adrenaline-fuelled free-roaming adventure!
- As agent Rico Rodriguez, your orders are to find and kill your friend and mentor who has disappeared on the island paradise of Panau. There, you must cause maximum chaos by land, sea and air to shift the balance of power. With the unique grapple and parachute combo, BASE jump, hijack and create your own high-speed stunts. With 400 square miles of rugged terrain and hundreds of weapons and vehicles, Just Cause 2 defies gravity and belief.
- Complete Edition includes:
- Just Cause 2 base game
- The following DLC
- Black Market Aerial Pack
- Black Market Boom Pack
- Bull's Eye Assault Rifle
- Rico's Signature Gun
- Chevalier Classic
- Agency Hovercraft
- Monster Truck
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26 Comments
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And you now admit that 12% isn't enough to make a profit
Sorry, now you can have the last word. Just wanted that to sink in you proved my entire point for me. I really appreciate you changing sides...despite your short attention span and ad hominem deflections.
And yes, that is a very confusing statement if you are actually suggesting such.
The product, price, and reseller gross profit are the same. Zero difference. Only actual difference is Steam is not true digital ownership, but offers much more through their service, while GOG does offer (some) DRM free games yet doesn't offer a lick beyond that.
Pick your poison but both charge the publisher 30%. Your entire pretend point, one you cannot contest. You are basically arguing swimming in lake water will get you wet but ranting how we should go swimming in a pond so we will get less wet somehow. Same H2O, just a smaller body of it. LOL....
(now he is going to start nitpicking my analogy)
And yes, that is a very confusing statement if you are actually suggesting such.
The product, price, and reseller gross profit are the same. Zero difference. Only actual difference is Steam is not true digital ownership, but offers much more through their service, while GOG does offer (some) DRM free games yet doesn't offer a lick beyond that.
Pick your poison but both charge the publisher 30%. Your entire pretend point, one you cannot contest. You are basically arguing swimming in lake water will get you wet but ranting how we should go swimming in a pond so we will get less wet somehow. Same H2O, just a smaller body of it. LOL....
(now he is going to start nitpicking my analogy)
Epic, Microsoft and others sell games at a much more equitable 88/12 split.
So why aren't games cheaper on those platforms? Because Steam won't let them. If they ever want to sell their game on Steam, they have to make the end-user price the same (excluding some sales). Here is an excerpt from an active class action:
"Valve interprets and enforces its PMFN (Permanent Most Favored Nation) to mandate that the publisher cannot sell that version in other stores for a cheaper price, even when the competing store has a much lower commission. Valve thus prevents the game publisher from selling at a lower price on the alternative store ..."
Epic, Microsoft and others sell games at a much more equitable 88/12 split.
So why aren't games cheaper on those platforms? Because Steam won't let them. If they ever want to sell their game on Steam, they have to make the end-user price the same (excluding some sales). Here is an excerpt from an active class action:
"Valve interprets and enforces its PMFN (Permanent Most Favored Nation) to mandate that the publisher cannot sell that version in other stores for a cheaper price, even when the competing store has a much lower commission. Valve thus prevents the game publisher from selling at a lower price on the alternative store ..."
Then the alternative to the alternative is GOG collecting a 30% cut vs Steam's 30% cut. Big difference! The splitting of hairs couldn't get any thinner.
But hey, like I said many times above...GOG is still great. I don't hold anything against them. But between their 30% GP% and Epic's "multi-billion dollar corporation" size...not sure you should be casting stones towards the only true innovator out of any of them. But Steam does have faults, no one has suggested otherwise.
Fun useless fact: I live about 30 minutes from Tim Sweeney and somehow his cell phone calls (for like a month) would automatically roll over to my wife's cell phone because someone messed up a digit on his call forwarding at Epic Game's HQ. It was an interesting month for my wife to be sure! Even spoke to Mr. Sweeney a few times trying to get that corrected, he promised to send me "a bunch of games and merch"...never did arrive...but I honestly didn't expect it to. No harm done, just 500+ voicemails for us to go through.
Then the alternative to the alternative is GOG collecting a 30% cut vs Steam's 30% cut. Big difference! The splitting of hairs couldn't get any thinner.
But hey, like I said many times above...GOG is still great. I don't hold anything against them. But between their 30% GP% and Epic's "multi-billion dollar corporation" size...not sure you should be casting stones towards the only true innovator out of any of them. But Steam does have faults, no one has suggested otherwise.
Fun useless fact: I live about 30 minutes from Tim Sweeney and somehow his cell phone calls (for like a month) would automatically roll over to my wife's cell phone because someone messed up a digit on his call forwarding at Epic Game's HQ. It was an interesting month for my wife to be sure! Even spoke to Mr. Sweeney a few times trying to get that corrected, he promised to send me "a bunch of games and merch"...never did arrive...but I honestly didn't expect it to. No harm done, just 500+ voicemails for us to go through.
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But I don't think the other guy is actually able to look at things objectively so it would most likely fall on deaf ears.
The move from Windows 8 to 10 was because Windows 8 stopped getting support. Why would (any platform) continue to support an OS that has gapping security holes that no one plans on patching? It could put MILLIONS of users at risk. One infected machine could spread to the entire user base.
This was a software industry move, not just Steam. GOG didn't do it because they are mostly running a file server....heck their "GOG GALAXY 2.0" (and glorified download client) is still in beta and appears to have been last updated January of 2023. Wonder if GOG even knows Windows 11 is a thing
But GOG GALAXY still works fine, I have it installed. Also it is pretty cool how it seems open source so things like Heroic Launcher (Linux / Steam Deck support) can integrate with it.
Spoiler alert: in 2025 Windows 10 will stop getting support [microsoft.com], you are about to be mad at thousands of software companies in a few months for jumping ship from Windows 10.
But I don't think the other guy is actually able to look at things objectively so it would most likely fall on deaf ears.
Odd...because Steam has a Linux OS of their own, as well as full Linux and Mac support.
The move from Windows 8 to 10 was because Windows 8 stopped getting support. Why would (any platform) continue to support an OS that has gapping security holes that no one plans on patching? It could put MILLIONS of users at risk. One infected machine could spread to the entire user base.
This was a software industry move, not just Steam. GOG didn't do it because they are mostly running a file server....heck their "GOG GALAXY 2.0" (and glorified download client) is still in beta and appears to have been last updated January of 2023. Wonder if GOG even knows Windows 11 is a thing
But GOG GALAXY still works fine, I have it installed. Also it is pretty cool how it seems open source so things like Heroic Launcher (Linux / Steam Deck support) can integrate with it.
Spoiler alert: in 2025 Windows 10 will stop getting support [microsoft.com], you are about to be mad at thousands of software companies in a few months for jumping ship from Windows 10.
As far as beta thing goes, beta isn't always a bad thing. Take "MakeMKV" for example, it says on their forum support page "all features of MakeMKV are free while program is in beta." It has been in beta since 2008.
As far as beta thing goes, beta isn't always a bad thing. Take "MakeMKV" for example, it says on their forum support page "all features of MakeMKV are free while program is in beta." It has been in beta since 2008.
And I never said "beta" a bad thing, assuming active development. Not patching your current and only software for 24 months which is still in "beta" stage is a bad thing, alarmingly so. 24 months is an insane amount of time in computer terms.
Good luck and I mean that sincerely.
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