"We still have a lot more PC-gaming history to revive, but we’re thrilled that we’ve kept up our goal of releasing at least two new games each week. "It's been less than six months since we started the open beta, and in that time we've managed to sign 20 publishers and reach the 100-games milestone," said Adam Oldakowski, Managing Director of GOG.com. Teenagent ( gamecard/teenagent), a point-and-click adventure game from Polish developer and fellow CD Projekt family member, Metropolis Software, is now available for the low, low price of NOTHING, joining the two other free games already available at GOG.com, Beneath a Steel Sky and Lure of the Temptress from Revolution Software. GOG.com ( ), the ultimate digital distribution platform for DRM-free and cheap – or even free – classic PC games, is proud to announce the addition of yet another Good Old Game, bringing the total tally to a cool 100. Metropolis Software’s Point-and-Click Adventure Teenagent is the 100 th Title Added to DRM-Free Site GOG.com Celebrates 100-Game Milestone with a Freebie Teenagent joins Beneath a Steel Sky and Lure of the Temptress in GOG.com's steadily-growing collection of show-up-and-it's-free games. Right-click on something to get a description of it, and left click to talk to someone or use an item. Click anywhere on the screen to make Mark walk there. The game is mouse controlled, and is very easy to use. Lured by the promise that agents get all the chicks, dude, Mark becomes the agency's saving grace as he cracks the case on a series of bank robberies. GAMEPLAY Teenagent is a good old-fashioned adventure game that began life as a commercial game, but was released as freeware in 1999. Originally released in 1994 by CD Projekt family member, Metropolis Software, Teenagent tells the point-and-click adventure of Mark Hopper, a boy kidnapped by two suits from the RGB agency. Regardless of my time-mangling abilities (perceived or otherwise), GOG.com's 100th game comes in the form of a freebie named Teenagent. I'm pretty sure I'm right about that one. I could've sworn that GOG.com was there in 1997 to help launch the Fallout series. ![]() ![]() "In that time," said Managing Director Adam Oldakowski, "we've managed to sign 20 publishers and reach the 100-games milestone." It must be the nature of their business-the peddling of good old games, as it were-that makes it feels as though they've been around the block so many more times. ![]() There's actually some kind of anachronistic devilry at work here: GOG.com, believe it or not, has only been in open beta for about six months now.
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