The "1200 Good Old Games Collection-GOG" represents a paradox of the digital age: it is a comprehensive library of gaming history made possible by GOG's consumer-friendly DRM-free stance, yet it exists solely to undermine that same business model.
While it serves as an effective archival record of PC gaming history, it is an illegal distribution. For legitimate preservation and enjoyment, consumers are directed to purchase titles directly from GOG.com, Humble Bundle, or other authorized retailers, ensuring the creators and rights holders are compensated for their work.
The games that invented the shooter genre as we know it today. 1200 Good Old Games Collection-GOG
This isn't a single bundle you buy all at once. Rather, it refers to the milestone GOG hit several years ago—and has now vastly surpassed—of offering over 1,200 classic, DRM-free titles from the late 80s through the late 2000s.
Today, that number is closer to 3,000+, but the spirit of the "1200" collection remains the same. It includes iconic franchises like Diablo, Heroes of Might & Magic, Dungeon Keeper, Baldur’s Gate, Command & Conquer, and Fallout. The "1200 Good Old Games Collection-GOG" represents a
The grandfather of immersive sims. A terrifying blend of FPS, RPG, and survival horror. The GOG version comes pre-patched with community fixes (NewDark), so you don’t have to spend hours on forums.
Before we talk numbers, we need to talk philosophy. GOG was launched in 2008 by CD Projekt Group (the creators of The Witcher and Cyberpunk 2077) with a radical mission: rescue old games from abandonware status, patch them to run on modern hardware (Windows 10/11), and sell them without any Digital Rights Management (DRM). The games that invented the shooter genre as
The "1200 Good Old Games Collection" isn't a single bundle you buy at once (though GOG often runs massive sales). Rather, it refers to the curated threshold of the GOG library—specifically the subset of titles labeled "Good Old Game." As of recent counts, GOG hosts over 3,000 total products, but the classic "Old Games" portion sits at approximately 1,200 titles.
These 1,200 games represent the golden eras of PC gaming: the late 80s, the 90s, and the early 2000s.
