This article is from back in March, but I only heard about this today... i.e. that the Denuvo malware is (or will be, if it isn't already) also in console games as well as PC games. The article is about PS5, but it's almost assuredly on X-bone as well. (And even if it isn't on X-bone, I'd already sworn off ever buying another Microsoft console years ago for other, similar reasons, anyway, so whatever.)
*shrug* Oh well, all the more reason for me not to be interested in modern consoles at all, I guess.
*shrug* Oh well, all the more reason for me not to be interested in modern consoles at all, I guess.
no subject
Date: 2021-09-14 07:35 pm (UTC)From:I've seen morons/fanboys/rep management drones say things along the lines of "meh, Denuvo will outlive you, it will always be supported, and worrying about the servers going down is stupid, just buy the game already." I'm sure similar morons said the same sort of things about SecuROM and SafeDisc, too. The only way to play SecuROM/SafeDisc-infected games nowadays is through cracks (official or otherwise), especially given that Windows 10 explicitly doesn't support software that includes SecuROM or SafeDisc now. (If only they would do the same with Denuvo... but then, as has been shown in the past, Microsoft is just peachy with the idea of phone-home DRM, so that'll probably never happen.)
As for me, I simply blanket boycott any games on PC that contain Denuvo at all, and that will be the case for console games going forward, also (theoretically speaking, of course, since I haven't cared about consoles since around 2014 or so, when I sold all the ones I had at the time). But then, that assumes that the devs/pubs properly disclose whether the game contains Denvuo or not, which, as we've seen, they sometimes don't (at least on Steam; no idea how/if that's handled at all on consoles). Only after it has been confirmed that the badware has been removed from a game will I even remotely consider buying such game, and even then, the likelihood of me ever buying it is very low.
no subject
Date: 2021-09-15 10:32 am (UTC)From:1. I don't spend a lot of money on digital stuff - I always wait for a sale.
2. If a game becomes unusable due to the malware servers going down, I end up blaming and boycotting the publisher and developer, most likely for the rest of my life. (As I will be way too apathetic to reassess if they've redeemed themselves.)
So I likely won't get bitten by that too often - or at all given as I said, I still haven't the slightest interest in getting a PS5. PS3 and PS4 had games on them I wanted to play enough to get the console - but the PS5 simply doesn't have that. And with all the goodwill burnt through by devs and publishers this last generation with how shitty they've been at releasing games - and the general deliberate destruction of physical media (The quality of and benefits of having quality media, not them actually crushing discs, naturally) I'm pretty much 90% certain I've seen my last playstation.
I have a switch but I honestly don't see myself using that nearly as much as you'd think, and to be honest Nintendo isn't that much better at physical releases than their competition. (Typically just getting a small bad tasting cart in a plastic case - no manual or anything.)
In all honesty these days they leave it to third parties like Limited Run Games to release a physical copy at all...
And yeah, I do the same with Denuvo riddled games on PC. As I click through discovery queues on steam, whether I'm interested in a game or not, I'll always scroll down to see if it has either third party drm, or a requirement of having a third party account somewhere. If I see either of those - the game is marked ignored. Even if the game has the Denuvo removed later on, or is changed so you don't have to sign up at the dev's website, the game is already marked as ignore, and I won't bother trying to figure out why I ignored it later on.