CD Projekt RED has proven over the years with its GoG store that DRM systems are absurdly useless and far from helping the industry, they only cause further inconvenience to users who opt for the payment option. It does not make sense to trip up those who buy regularly and leave them in the position of finishing hacking a game to make it work better on your computer.
An incredible case history
It is not the first time but it is one of the last: Capcom has decided to remove the protection he was wearing Resident Evil Village on PC –DRM ofDenuvo Software Solutions GmbH– to allow its performance to improve and be much better than before. Yes, even if you don’t want to believe what you are understanding, the game was not going completely smoothly because of this anti-piracy software and we have all suffered it without question.
The Japanese joke lasted two years, whichthat they have kept a title in PC stores that was known to be not performing as it should due to these protection measures, and that could be verified first-hand as soon as a user chose to break that DRM and enjoy Resident Evil Village without him. Right here below you have a video with the proof…
In the end, a scenario that many of us already experienced in the early 2000s, when PC game companies went crazy shoving in all sorts of anti-copy software which made it much more playable and useful to resort to downloading from eMule. At the beginning of the century, walking with blocks due to random access to the CD while we were playing was quite normal in the releases of companies such as Electronic Arts and many others, who preferred to kick their users in the shins legal instead of those who were not.
history repeats itself
It is evident that companies have legitimacy to preserve their rights within their intellectual properties and receive money for their work, but it is quite another thing to take those who are paying you and put obstacles in place that the versions do not have. cracked of many titles. Whoever resorts to digital or physical stores, must be taken care of, pampered and encourage them to do it again by preventing every time they want to enjoy a game it behaves worse because it has software special that protects him.
That Resident Evil Village I’ve been two years with that software denuvo it is an anachronism that the players legalthe ones we bought on Steam, the Epic Games Store, etc., we should de facto disown for let the publisher that this is not the way.
And to convince them, nothing better than showing them the example of GoG and CD Projekt RED, where no game for sale with DRM and it not only improves the performance of many of them, but also our feeling of really being the owners of what we are buying. Without platforms that have to give us online permissions to play anywhere without limitations. Don’t you think?