neosapian: yes you heard it right! 30 days!
Ice_Mage: That's 30 days to request a refund, not 30 days to play the game. There are some short games in the store that can be played in full in 2 hours. What game are you trying to refund and how long did you play it?
If we ignore the demos and prologues, and go by the criteria that the game in question was:
A) purchased not longer than 30 days ago (since that's the reason neosapian thinks he is still eligible for a refund),
AND
B) was played longer than 2 hours (since that's the reason GOG used to deny a refund, accordingly to neosapian),...
..."
Space Hack" (playtime: 2:01hrs) and "
Baldur's Gate 2 Complete" (2:14 hrs) would be the most probable candidates.
Of course those two are at the absolute lowest end of the playtime spectrum, so - in these two cases, GOG may probably still have granted a refund (?)
(though I don't know how strictly GOG sticks to the "2 hours max. rule").
If we look at the next games which fit both criteria, and where criterion A
(played longer than 2 hours) is still in the single digits, it could be:
"
Baldur's Gate: the Original Saga" (4:56 hrs),
"
Mafia Classic" (4:67 hrs),
"
Neverwinter Nights Diamond" (5:50hrs),
"
Ultimate Fishing Simulator" (5:59 hrs), or
"
The Beast Inside" (7:34 hrs).
Of these, only "The Beast Inside" can be played through in the time shown
(according to "howlongtobeat"), and of course it's hard to say how much time one is willing to spend on the "Fishing Simulator".
And everything after that shows playtimes from 10:02 hours up to 194:49 hours...aka: enough time to play through most
(modern, non-RPG) games.
Of course: none of us knows the "refund-history" of neosapian.
Maybe he uses the offer to refund often?
Maybe more often, than GOG thinks of as reasonable?