GOG.com is pushing back against the industry's shift toward digital-only gaming by publishing a tutorial that teaches players how to create their own physical copies of games they own. The move comes directly after Sony announced it will cease PlayStation disc production by 2028, a decision that sparked widespread backlash from players concerned about long-term access to their libraries.
GOG shared a Twitter guide demonstrating how users can download offline installers for any games in their collection, then burn them to physical media for preservation. The platform positions itself as an advocate for player ownership in an industry increasingly hostile to it. By providing this practical instruction, GOG emphasizes its core value proposition: DRM-free games that players can actually control.
The timing is strategic. Sony's disc discontinuation represents a watershed moment for the industry's push toward streaming and digital-only distribution. Major publishers have been quietly shifting consumers away from ownership toward licensing models where games can vanish if servers shut down or companies revoke access. GOG's tutorial directly counters that narrative by empowering individual gamers to become their own archivists.
This isn't purely altruistic. GOG has built its entire business model around selling DRM-free games, positioning the platform as a haven for players who distrust digital storefronts. While Steam dominates PC gaming, GOG occupies a smaller but loyal niche of users who value permanent ownership and offline play. By highlighting Sony's decision and offering a preservation solution, GOG reinforces why its approach matters.
The move also taps into growing frustration with digital erosion. Players have watched beloved games delisted from storefronts, licenses expire, and servers shut down, leaving digital purchases inaccessible. Physical media, despite the industry's efforts to phase it out, remains the only reliable preservation method available to consumers.
GOG's tutorial won't stop Sony's disc elimination or reverse
