this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2023
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Oh come on
It means they're a bunch of twats that have never considered the future or their customer's needs (some game devs and publishers release non-DRM versions eventually)
You can't guarantee how safe the crack is. If there was some really cleverly hidden malware, now it's on them
Cracks may still be imperfect and have issues. Again if something doesn't work, now it's on them
Just how stupid does it make them seem? All this time fighting piracy and now they'd be lost without them. Because we know how the likes of R* handles their old properties. If they had to do it themselves, it would be a fuckup
Whatever it is these kinds of arguments are trying to criticize, I don't think the resolution is one that is favorable to gamers.
I'd rather have a cracked cheap DRM-free copy than one whose new price factors in development to do correctly.
Points 1 and 2 are jabs at the company postures sure but once you peel that back don't tell me you want them back on the DRM train. Who cares if the company position seems silly.