Posted December 14, 2022
dtgreene: So, suppose you are playing a single player game that is still actively getting patched, and that is long enough for you to not finish on a single session.
* Do you update the game as soon as a new version is released, possibly with bug fixes, new features (and possibly new bugs), and balance changes (that could improve your build or ruin it)?
* Or, do you prefer not to update unless there's a fix for a bug you've encountered, or are certain to have encountered, or if you're in-between playthroughs?
It depends, but in general I disable game updates by default on any platform that lets me, or disable them until I play it next. But then I usually update it manually before I play it too unless I know for sure about some issue with the update from a gaming community such as this. I used to update my GOG game downloads regularly and keep multiple versions of everything around but haven't done that for a few years now due to lack of disk space and other technical reasons but I'm about to start doing that again sometime in the next few months and going forward. GOG Galaxy has the game-rollback feature to undo the last update so it's low risk to allow an update to get installed via Galaxy IMHO also. * Do you update the game as soon as a new version is released, possibly with bug fixes, new features (and possibly new bugs), and balance changes (that could improve your build or ruin it)?
* Or, do you prefer not to update unless there's a fix for a bug you've encountered, or are certain to have encountered, or if you're in-between playthroughs?
On other game platforms that require the game be the latest version as the only option, and do not have downloadable installers I guess the only preference in those cases is whether to buy the game in the first place there or not if it matters, and strongly prefer GOG instead of those other platforms, since there is no other viable choice really.
Another issue though, is if a newer version of a game has improvements etc. but it comes at a cost of lowered performance on your specific hardware, which has happened before to me too. Same options as above apply to that though.
Yet another possible issue is a game update breaking mods, which is almost always a given for any game update of any game, kinda comes with the turf so to speak though.
In general, I rarely ever concern myself too deeply about all of it though. It'd have to be a specific game with specific reasons that I'm pre-aware of to really concern too much about it.