Its so good to meet someone who gives back to the pastime they enjo- oh wait...nomercyrules10 said:I don't pay for any video games. Deal with it.
Its so good to meet someone who gives back to the pastime they enjo- oh wait...nomercyrules10 said:I don't pay for any video games. Deal with it.
Yeah I have crysis and I was confused by that too, there's no DRM, only SecureROM (or some similar medium) to make sure the disc is there.Epifols said:So I was liking this article until this
"Note that Crysis was a tech-heavy game that was notoriously hard to run and offered no demo. It was saddled with install-limit DRM. "
Uhh, what? Crysis DID have a demo, and no install limit. If this guy can't get basic facts like this straight, all of a sudden I'm skeptic of the other things he has said.
I wrote a email today asking the same thing. I'm still waiting for EA to realize that they have Crysis Warhead on Steam, but it still comes with limited activations with SecuROM. Seriously, that is the only reason I haven't played that game yet, and they have it on Steam for Christ's sake, isn't that enough?Snotnarok said:DRM promotes piracy, because who the hell is going to buy a game that they're limited to installs? No one.
I think you unintentionally answered the Piracy problem, use steam, because they seem to have it down. Sure their customer service is beyond bad but you get a game, register it and you're good to go, forever. I heard from a friend that they said "if they ever go out of business they will unlock all their games" so hot damn Piracy issue should be solved with them. You can buy games in a store, or off their site and register it with steam, no DRM (of course you should check if Non-valve games have it or not) or any thing of the sort. Oh, and unlike Resident Evil 5, free updates and unlike Gears of War, Halo, other shooters FREE maps and FREE new guns with their games.ROBO_LEADER said:I wrote a email today asking the same thing. I'm still waiting for EA to realize that they have Crysis Warhead on Steam, but it still comes with limited activations with SecuROM. Seriously, that is the only reason I haven't played that game yet, and they have it on Steam for Christ's sake, isn't that enough?Snotnarok said:DRM promotes piracy, because who the hell is going to buy a game that they're limited to installs? No one.
Well, given what's been happening in Somalia, you can be forgiven.ElephantGuts said:I thought this thread was going to be about actual sea-faring pirates. God I'm dumb.
That's one thing I wish Xbox Live Marketplace would take to heart.Shamus Young said:I've mentioned before that prices should simply drop during the shelf-life of a game to glean the sales of those lower-tier customers.
I didn't buy Crysis myself, and based my statements on what I'd found in Google:Epifols said:So I was liking this article until this
"Note that Crysis was a tech-heavy game that was notoriously hard to run and offered no demo. It was saddled with install-limit DRM. "
Uhh, what? Crysis DID have a demo, and no install limit. If this guy can't get basic facts like this straight, all of a sudden I'm skeptic of the other things he has said.
No, the person who came up with DRM is a genius, who must have heard the conspiracy theory that viruses are made and released by anti virus companies.He's found a way of selling something hugely expensive that doesn't work, that companies don't need and customers don't want.HobbesMkii said:Shamus Young: Quickly becoming the smartest games commentator on the web.
I don't know who came up with "DRM" but he must be a certifiable idiot.
Alright, fair enough. I didn't realize you were talking about this from research, not from personal experience. Yeah it can be a pain to find accurate specific accurate information online.Shamus Young said:Dang. I was wrong on both points. The demo was delayed, but was still apparently out around launch time.
Sigh. TWO corrections.
Obvious troll is obvious. Soup kitchen my ass.nomercyrules10 said:I volunteer at soup kitchens and donate to charity on a regular basis. I'd rather give my time and money to people who need it; I really don't care to support the developers. And besides, video games aren't that entertaining most of the time. If the developers didn't release any games I wouldn't be at a loss much. The best part about most games these days is the hype surrounding them.
Hehe.. that's brilliant!Note that Crysis was a tech-heavy game that was notoriously hard to run and offered no demo. It was saddled with install-limit DRM. It was a flashy action game, the kind that pirates seem to love. And when it was predictably commandeered by pirates, Crytek threw a tantrum and forswore further PC development. This is like setting your house on fire and then complaining about the neighborhood traffic jam caused by all the firetrucks