![]() And I am talking about a completely new rig, direct connection to my router without using Wlan and a clean install of Windows and Galaxy. Download rates constantly jump up and down, they've reached 14Mb/s for some seconds, only to fall back to 1.5 Mb/s and since then, they fluctuate between 1 and 3 Mb/s. Right now I am trying to download CP 2077 and my overall download speed is about 1 to 2 Mb/s on average. Galaxy is a hot mess in more than one regard and I've actually have caught myself not playing games simply because of this dumbster fire. GOG and Galaxy on the other hand have increasingly shown to be a bloody joke over the last years. I really can't see any abuse here, but maybe you want to elaborate. ![]() Also, so far I never had problems with the support, which was always and actually, you know, supportiv. ![]() The client allows me to download my games at an actually decent speed, also, it runs stable, shows no crashes and does not hog lots of CPU power and memory just by running in the background doing nothing. The client actually works, it has a lot of functions that are actually useful or which I can at least hide or ignore. I mean, any installed games on my computer are going to be accessed via icons on my desktop, but I’m all for multiple options to do the same thing.Īnyway, I’m going to hang on to this for the future, and while it doesn’t really touch on MMOs (I don’t tend to go through Steam for those), it’s useful for everything else in my digital games collection.Obliviondoll: Not quite Valve level of abusive After 19 years of using Steam and still having many gripes with Valve/Steam, I could at least kinda make my peace with them. I ran a quick test to boot up and play a Steam title through Galaxy 2.0. There’s a friends list and some other bells and whistles, but really, the only thing I cared about was just having everything in one spot. The client is very straight-forward, with the option to make the landing page your library, the store, or your recently played titles. I don’t do that as often on Steam, and I only touch the Epic Games Store when they give away something free. I could scan through them, see achievements, played time, the works.įor me, I think that this will be the most useful for browsing through my complete library when I’m on the prowl for something to try or play next. Within minutes of booting it up, I had my Steam and Epic Games Store linked to GOG, throwing all of these games under the same umbrella. And the crazy thing is that, yes, it does. So believe me when I say that I was incredibly excited to try out Galaxy 2.0, just to see if it, you know, actually worked. Gamers these days know how annoying it is to have to deal with multiple platform clients and try to remember what game is on what and have to struggle with them clogging up memory while they’re all loaded at the same time. Over the past several years, I’ve built up a library of two hundred or so games, and the Galaxy client has become more useful installing and uninstalling them rather than using the website itself.īut then I heard about Galaxy 2.0 and the seemingly wonderful promise of being able to funnel ALL of my digital game platforms into one place, and I saw rainbows and unicorns (that’s my wallpaper motif, but I was also pretty excited). GOG Galaxy is the digital platform for GOG.com, my preferred site for games (some modern, tons retro). While everyone seemed mad for a WoW Classic beta key last month, the only key I really wanted this summer was the one I got last week - access to GOG Galaxy 2.0.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |