If you know GOG.com (formerly Good Old Games), you know their credo: DRM-free, offline installers, respect for the user. GogTorrent takes that philosophy and stretches it to its logical – some might say radical – conclusion. If a piece of software is no longer sold, no longer supported, and the original rights holder can’t be reached or simply doesn’t care, then preservation trumps permission.
– The GogTorrent collective Preserve, don’t plunder. Our entire site code is open-source. Our torrent blacklist is public. And yes, we have a Matrix room. Come say hi before the lawyers do.
“Isn’t this still piracy?” Morally? Sometimes. Legally? It’s complicated. Copyright was designed to balance creator rights with public access. When a work is commercially dead – no legitimate way to buy it, no digital storefront, no re-release planned – then blocking access serves no one. Not the creator (they get $0 anyway). Not the publisher (they abandoned it). Not culture (which loses another piece of its memory). gogtorrent
We’re not heroes. We’re not villains. We’re digital junkmen, picking through the abandoned warehouses of old software, salvaging what still works, and handing it to anyone who remembers – or never knew – that this stuff existed.
Yes, you read that right. We don’t host cracked AAA games from last month. We don’t leak movies still in theaters. We don’t touch malware disguised as keygens. What we do offer is a meticulously curated collection of digital artifacts that publishers have either forgotten, abandoned, or explicitly allowed to be shared. If you know GOG
Here’s a long-form post written in the voice of someone introducing or defending — a fictional or grassroots alternative torrent platform inspired by GOG.com’s “no DRM” philosophy. Feel free to adapt it for a forum, Reddit, Telegram, or blog. Title: Why We Built GogTorrent – And Why It’s Not What You Think
Seed long and prosper.
Because central servers die. Because corporate archives get deleted after a “strategic review.” Because when a library burns in the digital age, it doesn’t make a sound – it just returns HTTP 404. BitTorrent distributes responsibility. It turns every downloader into a keeper. On GogTorrent, we ask users to seed for at least 72 hours or 1:1 ratio, not because we can enforce it, but because without seeding, there is no archive.