rcblanke,
Thank you so much for this kick butt program. When I was a kid in the 80's I often thought about how to make a program to keep track of all my DOS games and their specialized settings and game instructions. Sadly, I never got around to it and just settled for the HDM menu system instead (which was pretty good for it). Just as well though, because decades later, DBGL combined with DOSBox is far better than anything I imagined.
I have a few suggestions but I won't bother you with the nit-picky details until you have had a chance to fix them on your own. Here are some of my better suggestions.
Add an [autoexec] editor so I don't have to use a bat file to load extra thingies. This _might_ be easiest managed by leaving the mount statements out of the editor... or not.
On the profiles grid, alternate the background color of the rows for every new value in the current sort column. i.e. If you are sorting on Genre then all Action rows would be one color and all Adventure rows would be another. Or, if sorting on Title, every row would alternate colors. (This should probably be optional.)
This is the biggie. I would VERY MUCH LIKE to be able to export an entire game profile for distribution. The .conf file, the screenshots, and the database data -- all in one file. This is especially because I like the screenshots and the Notes section so much (I type in simplified game instructions myself). This would no doubt be a huge amount of work but it may simplify future DBGL database changes and upgrades (much of the upgrade code would already be there because of this) and should also increase the popularity of DBGL.
BTW: if you are still looking for another name for DBGL, how about DOSBoss, or something like that. DBDB? DB-squared? Don't be square? DoubleTrouble? Ahh, forget it. DOSBoss sounds great if it isn't already taken.