abstract alien
Member
Legit question. I've been out of PC gaming for years now, but has Denuvo slowed the rate of piracy at all?
Actually, they did help a lot.Legit question. I've been out of PC gaming for years now, but has Denuvo slowed the rate of piracy at all?
Nope. take it from an ex pirate who now mostly buys games, the juice isnt worth the squeeze unless you REALLY hate the publisher or can't justify the purchase. Losing steam workshop, online and cloud saves is too much for me.On a more serious note. Sailing the high seas, seems to be a lot less fuss to get stuff working vs. the stuff you actually paid for.
This tech in the hands of publishers wrecks a big reasons one would ever buy PC’s over consoles… sigh …As a PC gamer that thoroughly enjoys modding: Fuck any and every single player game that uses this.
And the developer and publisher. Top to bottom. Fuck every single one of you.
based
From what I heard, only around half or maybe less than half of the games with Denuvo have been cracked, so if that's true then yes, it has slowed the rate of piracy.Legit question. I've been out of PC gaming for years now, but has Denuvo slowed the rate of piracy at all?
You don't buy the game, you own a revocable digital access to a copy of the game protected by DRM.So I'll buy the games and then play a cracked copy, gotcha.
Not even sure that will work tbh, the crack makers goal is not to fully remove protection, only stop it from working, sigh.
From what I heard, only around half or maybe less than half of the games with Denuvo have been cracked, so if that's true then yes, it has slowed the rate of piracy.
If this is the case, what reason do they have to stop? There will always be a war on stealing, so it may as well be half a war from their perspective.Actually, they did help a lot.
Probably the PC market growth in recent years has nothing to do with it.
But it did help to prevent the days of games from getting released 15 days before the official lunch day on torrent sites.
plus some cheap ass ppl from developed countries were focred to buy the actual games
instead of waiting sometimes 3 years before the game gets cracked.
They don't have a reason to stop. Denuvo is not going anywhere and as you can see it's just going to get worse.If this is the case, what reason do they have to stop? There will always be a war on stealing, so it may as well be half a war from their perspective.
I agree with everyone but this might actually be good for online games and cheating. Assuming it doesnt impact performance and it does in fact block any attempts of data modification like cheats, then that might just make me return to online gaming.
Legit question. I've been out of PC gaming for years now, but has Denuvo slowed the rate of piracy at all?