CD Projekt’s retro game-focused digital storefront, GOG, has been with us for a whopping 15 years now. To rejoice, GOG’s having a storewide sale and freely giving free copies of the 2013 point-and-click journey sport, The Night time of the Rabbit.
You may declare your copy by logging into GOG on a browser and scrolling right down to the Night time of the Rabbit banner on the shop’s homepage. The giveaway will run this weekend till September 25, with the sale persevering with by October 2.
In one other life, earlier than being sentenced to the pits of Mordor to slave away on The Lord of the Rings: Gollum, German developer Daedalic specialised in heartfelt, plot-drive point-and-click adventures with beautiful, painterly artwork types. The Night time of the rabbit was one such journey from this heyday, and on the time, former PCG editor Richard Cobbett wrote that it had “no little quantity of fashion or artistry prepared for anybody who cares to drop in for this journey down the rabbit gap.”
The sale isn’t any slouch both: GOG touts Nightdive’s System Shock at $30 (25% off) and Divinity: Authentic Sin 2 for $15 (65% off). Whereas Phantom Liberty is not on sale, the Cyberpunk 2077 base sport will be had for $36 (40% off) with a bundle of base sport and growth going for $64 (20% off).
For my very own library, I’ve opted for the “GOG basic” of ten old-ass video games for below 50 bucks whole. I lastly have a digital copy of The Elder Scrolls 4: Oblivion, so I not should mud off a USB Blu-ray drive and my previous GOTY version DVD, and I am going to lastly be trying out the Star Trek: Elite Power video games, a gaggle of Voyager FPSes on the Jedi Academy engine.
I believe the primary GOG buy I made was a bundle of Baldur’s Gate 1 and a couple of collectively again in ’09, and to this present day it is nearly the one digital sport storefront or launcher except for Steam I’ve willingly and enthusiastically chosen to make use of. It is an incredible useful resource for entering into basic PC gaming, and it is heartening to see GOG’s continued success.