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The penitent man shall Use Item On...



<span class="bold">Indiana Jones&reg; and the Last Crusade&trade;</span>, the classic point'n'click adventure starring Henry Jones Jr. and his disapproving dad, is now available for Windows, Mac, and Linux, DRM-free on GOG.com, with a 25% launch discount.

He hates snakes. He hates Nazis. He hates being called "Junior" by his dad. But he loves a good adventure, even if it contains all of the above.
This time, hands-on archeologist Indiana Jones is on the trail of the Holy Grail, but so are Adolf Hitler's lackeys. Tracking down the resting place of the last Knights will send both Indy and his dad on a journey full of cunning puzzles, spooky crypts, double-crossing dames, and a constant need for their unique brand of problem solving: improvisation and fisticuffs. Based on the last movie of the franchise (yes, the LAST one), The Last Crusade contains many locations that never appeared on the big screen, plenty of old-school action, and tons of well-placed references that may or may not belong in a museum.



Punch Nazis with your fedora on, solve puzzles with your whip, and try to keep up with the Joneses as they investigate <span class="bold">Indiana Jones&reg; and the Last Crusade&trade;</span>, DRM-free on GOG.com.
The 25% discount will last until December 28, 10:59 PM UTC.
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kbnrylaec: I am happy to pay 15-28% more for DRM-free games.
I will never buy any DRM stuff that is 15-28% cheaper.
I 100% agree with you.I am also ready to pay significantly more for a DRM-free version.I just have a gut feeling that some publishers discount DRM-ed games on purpose,and wont release it here,to push towards the "other" side ;).Cheers
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Cecco: Why is the 4 pages reference card numbered from 47 to 50! Beats me.
I wondered too.
You can see a hint on top of the PDF pages: It says "LucasArts Classic Adventures" which was a compilation consisting of:
- Maniac Mansion
- Zak McKracken and the Alien Mindbenders
- Loom
- The Secret of Monkey Island
- Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
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Tyrrhia: Oh. That’s because regional pricing is at play, right? So, countries with a currency weaker than the dollar are disadvantaged on GOG?
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te_lanus: Our prices on steam (those I checked) is on average 15-28% cheaper on steam, thus GoG is more expensive than Steam.
Being able to actually own and control a game is worth a greater price. Factor in quite a few cross listed games on GoG get all the original PC handouts from starmaps, manuals, maps, full guide books, other novellas, and other fluff Steam rejects why is this even an issue? I guess some people would rather save a dollar and tolerate being behind a required internet connection to fire up their games with the watchful eye over them. I do not. Until GoG Connect rolled along anytime a game hit both and was up for a 66%+ off sale I'd buy, save to a portable drive, reinstall, and delist off my steam account.
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te_lanus: Our prices on steam (those I checked) is on average 15-28% cheaper on steam, thus GoG is more expensive than Steam.
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tanukisuit: Being able to actually own and control a game is worth a greater price. Factor in quite a few cross listed games on GoG get all the original PC handouts from starmaps, manuals, maps, full guide books, other novellas, and other fluff Steam rejects why is this even an issue? I guess some people would rather save a dollar and tolerate being behind a required internet connection to fire up their games with the watchful eye over them. I do not. Until GoG Connect rolled along anytime a game hit both and was up for a 66%+ off sale I'd buy, save to a portable drive, reinstall, and delist off my steam account.
I can go weeks without starting the steam client, yet play my drmed steam games daily, no internet needed.
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Sir_Kill_A_Lot: I wondered too.
"LucasArts Classic Adventures" which was a compilation consisting of:
an unpleasing cover for some great content. The mistery of the extraordinary numeration of pages is solved. Now I gotta solve those roman numerals in Venice.
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tanukisuit: Being able to actually own and control a game is worth a greater price. Factor in quite a few cross listed games on GoG get all the original PC handouts from starmaps, manuals, maps, full guide books, other novellas, and other fluff Steam rejects why is this even an issue? I guess some people would rather save a dollar and tolerate being behind a required internet connection to fire up their games with the watchful eye over them. I do not. Until GoG Connect rolled along anytime a game hit both and was up for a 66%+ off sale I'd buy, save to a portable drive, reinstall, and delist off my steam account.
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te_lanus: I can go weeks without starting the steam client, yet play my drmed steam games daily, no internet needed.
So this leash long enough, and the cage is large enough for you.
But for someone a leash - it's just a leash, and even a large cage - it's just a prison anyway.
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Loger13: So this leash long enough, and the cage is large enough for you.
But for someone a leash - it's just a leash, and even a large cage - it's just a prison anyway.
must be a carton based cage, as (since I use linux, and have to play my windows games using wine) I use SSE (mostly) to get rid of steam, so that they become drm-free in a sense
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Loger13: So this leash long enough, and the cage is large enough for you.
But for someone a leash - it's just a leash, and even a large cage - it's just a prison anyway.
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te_lanus: must be a carton based cage, as (since I use linux, and have to play my windows games using wine) I use SSE (mostly) to get rid of steam, so that they become drm-free in a sense
This violates the terms of service (Steam LA). So that from the standpoint of the law using SSE with game does not differ from "pirated" version, except for the fact that you already paid for this illegal copy now.
The main difference between licensed and "pirated" version is not whether or not you paid the money, and in fact the legality of using your copy of the game.
As I understand here I won't have a problem with missing file (00.LFL) as in Steam version?
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NewPyk: As I understand here I won't have a problem with missing file (00.LFL) as in Steam version?
This file definitely exists in the GOG version. It even includes the original interpreter (INDY256.EXE).
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te_lanus: must be a carton based cage, as (since I use linux, and have to play my windows games using wine) I use SSE (mostly) to get rid of steam, so that they become drm-free in a sense
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Loger13: This violates the terms of service (Steam LA). So that from the standpoint of the law using SSE with game does not differ from "pirated" version, except for the fact that you already paid for this illegal copy now.
Yes, in some countries it may be illegal if you fix your DRM contaminated games (i.e. games which are broken by definition). Sad but true.
Post edited January 06, 2017 by Sir_Kill_A_Lot
BUG

LucasArts in GOG lists only one game, Indy3.
Lucasfilm Games in GOG lists 30 games, including those published with the LucasArts name.

Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade(Indy3) is published before the Lucasfilm-to-LucasArts-renaming, so it should be listed in Lucasfilm Games, not LucasArts.

The VGA version which GOG are selling now, still showed Lucasfilm Games in game.