Maximilian
Lifer
- Feb 8, 2004
- 12,604
- 15
- 81
Originally posted by: chizow
Ya, obviously you don't care about the future of PC gaming or you wouldn't advocate such myopic views. Of course Blizzard is an excellent example since they've always had one of the most effective forms of DRM, Battle.net. The writing is on the wall, if you haven't read the article or the various interviews published over the last few years you won't know just how grim the situation is. Various quotes from devs @ Tweakguides
The situation is fine, 1 article and a handfull of naysayers are meaningless.
Originally posted by: chizow
And again, that viewpoint is fundamamentally flawed because it assumes the majority of users will actually an encounter a problem with current DRM schemes, when in reality, they will not.
How about you look around this forum? Theres plenty of people with problems with DRM, and the people with limited activations, they will likely encounter problems with it later on. DRM is a cancer on gaming and it needs to be cured.
Originally posted by: chizow
The people who are "smart enough to avoid paying" for that garbage aren't doing paying customers any favors, just as people who steal anything aren't. Ultimately they drive up costs and may ultimately result in a discontinuation of product or service.
And again with Sins, read the article. It was pirated at the same ratio compared to sales of more popular games. Just because the Stardock devs choose to ignore pirated copies instead of lost sales doesn't mean piracy wasn't an issue for Sins of a Solar Empire heh.
Well how can you know those pirates would have bought the game anyway?! You dont! I know what pirates think like, i know plenty of them and i agree with stardocks conclusion that they wouldnt have bought the game anyways.
Originally posted by: chizowAmazing, someone would go through all that effort but finds uninstalling to regain an activation tedious! Just goes to show you cannot reason with unreasonable minds.
15 seconds in paint VS countless time uninstalling all the DRM activation schemes. How do you remember which ones have activation? You dont! It dosent say on the box damn... Oh well better uninstall everything to be safe. You totally ignored my point about the trend so ill bold it. Its the trend to use this DRM thats the problem, few games use activation now but if this crap catches on many more will in the future and you can be damn sure the publishers wont club together to make uninstall/removal methods easier with some integrated app that does it all, it will be a tedious process of uninstalling every game indivudually.