No. Man up and choose between graphics or modding. Beliving you have some sort of esoteric 'right' to the game is one of these weird entitlement complexes gamers seem to be growing everywhere.
I was thinking about this recently, situations in which piracy might be okay. I was largely thinking in terms of movies, but it works alright for games. It is based on a 'normal' response and a 'pirate's' response.
1. You want to see a movie. It is out on DVD but not showing in any movie theatres. Do you.
A. See if it is available for purchase or renting, either locally on online?
B. Pirate it.
If you answered A, congratulations you aren't an entitled dickhead. Why is it that if you asked most people they would respond that their first instinct would be to buy something, but there's this little determined group who are yelling, 'I bought a DVD Player and an HDTV, that means that I have access to all movies by right of my having bought a DVD Player and HDTV.' Just because you own all the consoles doesn't mean you have some sort of right to own the games that come out for them.
Anyway, corollary
2. The movie isn't available. What do you do now?
A. Decide to leave it, live's too short to waste on trying to dig up one movie they couldn't even be bothered to put on DVD.
B. Pirate it.
This is basically the only situation I really think piracy might be okay. The movie or game or books or zoetrope is not available commercially. I still maintain that your average citizen would just say 'fuck it' and move on but then some accounting has to be made for fans being fans. Without fans there might not have been quite a lot of movies or games even made, and supporting the roots of the games we love today is part of what makes gaming great. People still download emulators to play Pokemon Red and Blue because they remember the games from when they were growing up. Or they find versions of Ultima or 101 Dalmations: Spot's London Adventure because they were an integral part of gaming history and they want to experience the mythology.
It's like Star Wars fans, without whom the Star Wars Holiday Special wouldn't still be available. It's a part of the history and the mythology and without the fans it wouldn't still be alive today.
However, Skyrim or Mass Effect 3 or Modern Warfare whatever number are not part of our history yet, they are part of our present and pirating them for any reason instead of buying them is hurting gaming. And if you really were a fan, then you wouldn't do it. Cry about the state of the industry and big business and one pirated game not making that much impact but there are millions who are willing to pay to support the industry they love. Let's face it, if everyone thought the way that pirates did there wouldn't be an industry left.
I was thinking about this recently, situations in which piracy might be okay. I was largely thinking in terms of movies, but it works alright for games. It is based on a 'normal' response and a 'pirate's' response.
1. You want to see a movie. It is out on DVD but not showing in any movie theatres. Do you.
A. See if it is available for purchase or renting, either locally on online?
B. Pirate it.
If you answered A, congratulations you aren't an entitled dickhead. Why is it that if you asked most people they would respond that their first instinct would be to buy something, but there's this little determined group who are yelling, 'I bought a DVD Player and an HDTV, that means that I have access to all movies by right of my having bought a DVD Player and HDTV.' Just because you own all the consoles doesn't mean you have some sort of right to own the games that come out for them.
Anyway, corollary
2. The movie isn't available. What do you do now?
A. Decide to leave it, live's too short to waste on trying to dig up one movie they couldn't even be bothered to put on DVD.
B. Pirate it.
This is basically the only situation I really think piracy might be okay. The movie or game or books or zoetrope is not available commercially. I still maintain that your average citizen would just say 'fuck it' and move on but then some accounting has to be made for fans being fans. Without fans there might not have been quite a lot of movies or games even made, and supporting the roots of the games we love today is part of what makes gaming great. People still download emulators to play Pokemon Red and Blue because they remember the games from when they were growing up. Or they find versions of Ultima or 101 Dalmations: Spot's London Adventure because they were an integral part of gaming history and they want to experience the mythology.
It's like Star Wars fans, without whom the Star Wars Holiday Special wouldn't still be available. It's a part of the history and the mythology and without the fans it wouldn't still be alive today.
However, Skyrim or Mass Effect 3 or Modern Warfare whatever number are not part of our history yet, they are part of our present and pirating them for any reason instead of buying them is hurting gaming. And if you really were a fan, then you wouldn't do it. Cry about the state of the industry and big business and one pirated game not making that much impact but there are millions who are willing to pay to support the industry they love. Let's face it, if everyone thought the way that pirates did there wouldn't be an industry left.