With controversial DRM like Denuvo constantly slipping throughout the latter half of 2017, many thought this spelled the end of current anti-piracy measures as we knew it. It seems that news of its death has been greatly exaggerated, however, as Denuvo the added layer of VMProtect has made life much harder for crackers.
Denuvo gained prominence throughout 2014 and 2015 as the hard-to-crack, yet controversial digital rights management anti-piracy measure, featured in games such as Dragon Age: Inquisition. This increased the wait time for pirates from the day of release to over a month later via Chinese cracking group, 3DM.
By 2016, 3DM deemed the protection almost uncrackable and initially gave up on removing the DRM from Just Cause 3, only for Denuvo’s to weaken later that year. By January 2017, the critically acclaimed Resident Evil 7 was cracked in record time, just five days after its initial release by the cracking group CONSPIR4CY (CPY), who had successfully tackled Rise of the Tomb Raider, Inside and Doom the year before.
The latest version that ships with Assassin’s Creed Origins sidesteps the “v3” anti-tamper emulation via by its new extra layer of security from its VMProtect. While this is by no means a perfect solution, it should be able to extend that protection window it was able to offer up until its 2016 downward spiral.
That being said, VMProtect is likely vary per title, just as Denuvo itself. While the above titles have all been cracked, pirates are still waiting on Sonic Forces, Injustice 2 and even the similarly controversial Star Wars Battlefront 2.
KitGuru Says: Many of our readers disagree with DRM while acknowledging that a protection layer still need to be put in place. It looks like those unwilling to shell out for a title might have to start waiting even longer than before. What do you think about the idea of VMProtect or Denuvo itself?
i will never buy any game with this crap on it
If you buy it digitally, then I agree with DRM. You were online at one time, you can be online again to aunthenticate. However if you buy a physical copy, then there should be no online requirement. You can satisfy the DRM with the Disc itself.
If developers/publishers want to treat their games like Rentals then I will simply pay a price I feel is appropriate to rent a game, which is 1/4 of it’s release price. Why are they like rentals? Because if Denuvo servers ever go down, then those games protected by it become unplayable. Any game that has DRM of any kind, that includes Steam’s DRM, it is automatically 1/4 of the release price that I will pay for a game. It has only been DRM free games that I have been paying full price for.
Also as shown by the study from the EU, they found no evidence that Piracy actually effect sales in the negative, but they did find some evidence that piracy might actually help sales for the positive. So congrats to the developers/publishers, you are literally spending money to make less money /facepalm
DRM is not needed and is a waste of money. Make a good game and sell for a fair price and you will make profits.
Till the day that the Denuvo Servers are shut down and then all the games with Denuvo on it will no longer be playable. And yes, we have seen DRM support get miscounted and games becoming unplayable. Buying games with DRM on it is the same as a rental.
I entirely agree. If you can play game only when creator allows you then you don’t own it. It’s 2017 and I still like to come back to TES3 Morrowind or NFS-U. I also still keep my old PC with WinXP for legacy titles. What if I want to play NFS 2017 in 2034? Can EA or Valve assure me that 100% it’s gonna work, with guarantee that otherwise I’m gonna get my money back?
I have to echo what others have said here I do not buy a game so it can be treated as a rental. If they decide to turn the servers off any games with this type of protection will become unusable. Since I do not play any of my games in multi player mode I just do the single player portions of the games I will buy the game & then download a fully working by pass or crack as most will put it and do the required install of that and never worry about any extra software blocks or performance sucking crap these dev or game companies like to have running.
I understand why they want to do this they want to get paid for the product they spent countless hours on for us to enjoy and them to make a boat load of cash. I disagree with the way they do it and is the reason even though I spend the money to buy a game i will wait for a by pass (crack) before I play it. It is pretty sad state of affairs when the pirated version works better than the straight up legal version of any given game well except for online play which I do not use any ways.
While I can’t say i’ve any problems with Doom 2016 and Injustice 2, I can see why some people disagree with DRM, having had some issues running a legit copy of Gears of War 1 at the time it was relevant.
With that said, i can kind of see a necessity for DRM when it comes to multiplayer games, since we live in an era where DRM exists not just for copy protection purposes but also to provide a service platform for multiplayer games (Steam, Origin and uPlay are inherently DRM)
However, for singleplayer games, I’d like to think that there is room for AAA releases on DRM-free services such as GOG.com and the Humble Store.
How about no DRM? GOG proves that it is possible. Denuvo’s servers went down and locked people out of games they paid for: https://www.tweaktown.com/news/60229/denuvo-drm-kept-gamers-playing-shadow-war-others/index.html
shit man that means no more free games please cpy and or 3dm or codex please do smothing its been 3 months no singal game got cracked
i dont have money man i spend all of it at my pc with i5 cpu and gtx 1060 8gb ram
agree man hobefully crackers do smothing about this shit
i bought Assassins Creed Origin for 30$ on a facebook deal. i will never paid 80$ + tx on a game. i prefer to wait for them on special.. but if u can afford it..if i cant try a game whit a demo or have a reeasonable price on it ill never buy it. So putting a DRM is a bad way to make money …
I would rather Donate $50 to the crackers who want to crack Denuvo than buy any game running Denuvo and support the developers in any way.
Denuvo has been proven based off multiple benchmarks and YouTube to affect performance, have FPS drops and such, as well as requires additional resources such as RAM / CPU / Hard DIsk reads rather than if it didn’t have Denuvo.
I do not want to pay for any game that is going to affect my ability to run multiple games at once on the same computer aka like 5+ copies of EVE Online / Black Desert max graphics 4k + play a Denuvo based game would create issues for example rather than if it had no Denuvo.
So I will not be buying games I would also rather wait the 12 months for a free version to be released online with No Denuvo and rest assured the new Denuvo will be cracked too just a matter of time.
I agree same issue as well why I am not buying any Denuvo based games, as well as the performance issues with games running Denuvo.
You all wanted that denuvo so stfu and srop cracking.
It’s been cracked by CPY-team one hour ago! Link – https://goo.gl/xU8iVD
Unpack to game folder, than run “CPY_loader”
Guys! I’m found this in Reddit, and it’s realy works!!! Thanks CPY! https://goo.gl/JbkiXB