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翻訳の問題を報告
I am pretty sure such a small company cannot afford serious DRM. That is why their best way of defending their property is by delivering high quality (which from the videos and level of interest in the game and seeing how beta keys have VANISHED you can infer they did delivery quality already).
Taking the above into consideration, going to GoG would be actually beneficial to devs as it would potentially give them extra market, exposure etc. A lot of people prefer GoG to Steam.
Julie from the Numantian team posted on their blog:
''Yes, we will release it to GOG as well. It will be Early Access on Steam first.''
That will take months :(
Did anyone find something else? I would really like it to buy it on GOG, but I also dont want to wait longer then ~chrismas :/
I think they are asking if it can be played offline.
You can check the following lists if you want to see what games are DRM free on Steam:
http://steam.wikia.com/wiki/List_of_DRM-free_games
https://pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/The_Big_List_of_DRM-Free_Games_on_Steam
Obviously, thanks to the huge amount of games that are on Steam at the moment, I don't expect these to be up to date.
You can play this offline by putting steam offline, there is no online requirement as far as im aware, my internet went off whilst i was playing the game....i kept playing the game i didnt even realise until i went to put some music on youtube on.
The fall of net netrality could drastically change the face of Steam.
How? Steam was just fine in 2015 before it existed, too.
Welp, my money's already been spend in this regard, anyway.
That NN thing came out of nowhere, but since you've brought this up... the regulations existed prior to 2015. What changed in 2015 was classification of the internet as a common carrier (title 2) which allowed the regulations to be applied.
What's different now is those edge cases of people having netflix throttled prior to 2015 are going to be more common place as a lot of regions only have 1 choice of provider and they lost their only protection.
Unfortunately, the US is in a position to force such issues on a number of other nations (just look what happened in Scandinavia in regards to IP enforcement after the multicorp lobby decided to put money into it). At least current EU structure makes it as a whole somewhat more resistant to outright corporate manipulation, but that's a tiny sliver of hope to hang on.