Today European publisher/distributor CD Projekt revealed a new site called Good Old Games. GOG will allow gamers to purchase old games online. The best part is, the games are DRM-free.

According to GOG: “You won’t find any intrusive copy protection in our games; we hate draconian DRM schemes just as much as you do, so at GOG.com you don’t just buy the game, you actually own it. Once you download a game, you can install it on any PC and even re-download it whenever you want, as many times as you need, and you can play it without an internet connection.”

You might be thinking, “Yeah, well they probably only have crap games.” Wrong. From the images on their site, they will be offering the Fallout series, MDK and the Freespace series. Three of my favorites. According to the site, GOG will be selling these games for $5.99 and $9.99. Not a bad deal at all. The service goes live in September, just in time to give you younger gamers a chance to catch up for Fallout 3.

Read: CD Projekt To Sell “Good Old Games” DRM-Free.



Today, Atari announced that new content for the PC RPG, The Witcher, will be arriving this week.

This first piece of content will be the Djinni Adventure Editor, a program that allows player to create mods and new adventures. Atari is also releasing the first official new adventure. Named “The Price of Neutrality”, the new adventure grants players a glimpse at the other witchers that are introduced at the start of the game. The last piece of content to be released is the 1.3 patch. The patch adds more polish to the game by adding more dialogue options, NPC models, and new character animations.

The official press release is after the jump. Continued…