The "1200 Good Old Games Collection" is the fruit of that labor. While Steam offers tens of thousands of games, GOG’s curated selection of 1,200+ "old" titles is unique because every single game in the "Good Old Games" category has been hand-tested. You aren't buying a broken ISO file; you are buying a piece of history rebuilt for modern hardware.
The 90s was the era of the "Interactive Movie." GOG has rescued nearly every LucasArts and Sierra classic.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of digital gaming, where live-service models and 100-gigabyte patches dominate headlines, there exists a sacred digital library dedicated to the past. That library is . Reaching a collection milestone of 1,200 classic titles is not just a number; it is a testament to a decade-long crusade against digital obsolescence.
Enter Marcin Iwiński and Michal Kiciński, the founders of CD Projekt. Having built their business by distributing games in Poland, they saw a gap in the global market. In 2008, they launched Good Old Games. The mission was radical: curate a massive collection of "Good Old Games," patch them to work perfectly on modern PCs, and sell them with absolutely no DRM.