Home / Software & Gaming / Pirate group to stop cracking games to see impact on sales

Pirate group to stop cracking games to see impact on sales

Video game cracking group, 3DM has revealed that it is going to be running an experiment, they won't be working on cracks for single-player games for around a year in order to assess any genuine impact piracy has on game sales. This follows on from recent comments that game piracy could die out due to encryption systems like Denuvo, which has proven troublesome for crackers to break through.

Writing in a blog post(via: TorrentFreak), a member of 3DM wrote: “We just had an internal meeting. Starting at the Chinese New Year, 3DM will not crack any single-player games. Cracks by overseas warez groups will still get posted on the 3DM forum, and we will actively deal with these. We’ll take a look at the situation in a year’s time to see if genuine sales have grown”.

denuvo

3DM is one of the more popular game cracking groups but it seems that stronger protection methods, like Denuvo, have caused some issues. Several Square Enix titles like Just Cause 3 and Rise of the Tomb Raider have yet to be cracked so Denuvo has definitely been an effective solution for some publishers.

KitGuru Says: While some do have their issues with Denuvo due to things like performance issues, it certainly has proven to be effective. It will be interesting to see if 3DM's lack of game cracking did end up having an impact on single-player game sales by this time next year. 

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Omni-movement DOOM

KitGuru Games: Omni-movement culminates 30 years of FPS innovation

Black Ops 6 is officially here, bringing the innovative new Omni-movement system to the game. While on the surface a relatively simple change, I argue that Treyarch intimately studied DOOM and the past 30 years of first-person shooter evolution to craft one of the most satisfying gameplay systems yet.

5 comments

  1. seriously doubt there will be an increase in sales. most people downloading cracked games aren’t going to go out and buy new ones.

  2. Its a very interesting concept. However there are other cracking groups.

  3. Gary 'Gazza' Keen

    That’s kind of the point they’re proving. Pirating doesn’t impact sales

  4. This is definitely interesting to see. If they can prove sales aren’t changing a bit, why stopping ;P

  5. Exactly. They should also consider the effect on traffic of other groups.
    There might not be an increase in sales, but increase in downloads from the likes of Razor 1911, skidrow, etc.