But if they can pull it off the rewards are great, not least because it would naturally funnel customers towards the GOG Store. GOG are banking on the convenience of a central hub for all this functionality being enough of a draw to bring in typically lazy gamers content lacking the motivation to embrace change. The cross console functionality does appear to be unique however, marking Galaxy 2.0 out from the crowd. It's possible for instance to configure Steam to launch the majority of non-Steam games, and Discord provides notification of friend activity and online status as well as acting as a comprehensive text and voice chat app. While fragmented, there are plenty of apps that when aggregated offer the same level or higher functionality on PC specifically. This project isn't without its challenges however. All-in-all, you're looking at a pretty comprehensive approach. list, including cloud saves (and reverts to previous saves), in-game overlays, managing game updates and more. Other quality of life features are also on the spec. You'll be able to use it to keep track of your friends as they play across all distribution platforms (Steam, Epic, UPlay etc.) and even to console, and although it's not explicitly stated it would only be a small step to integrating other social structures such as clans. You won't be able to one-click launch as you will a PC game (unless perhaps streaming *from* console becomes a thing), but it would allow you to keep track of in-game milestones and other console game metrics you wouldn't normally have access to on PC.įrom there, Galaxy 2.0 branches out into 'social media-lite' features. They also want to bring in your library of titles from other non-PC platforms such as consoles and perhaps even smartphones. That would immediately tick all the right boxes in terms of game library management, but GOG's ambitions go a little further. There has long been a need for this sort of platform-agnostic functionality, but recent developments (particularly Epic's foray into games distribution) increases not only demand but also urgency to ensure that PC gaming as a whole doesn't become a fractured mess. GOG Galaxy 2.0 aims to be a PC and Mac client which brings together your PC games library under one roof, no matter which distribution platform it was bought on (Steam, GOG, UPlay, Origin etc.). GOG have plans to change that however, centring on a more all-encompassing Galaxy app. Steam has become a centralised PC app for games distribution, patching, servers and friend 'management' - really the whole shebang whereas GOG and its Galaxy desktop application have garnered a reputation for revitalising genre classics and bringing them to modern PCs. GOG - formerly Good Old Games - has long played the underdog to Steam both in terms of their online store dominance and impact on your gameplay habits.
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