Petromir said:
DRM goes in cycles, for every new one that annoys people, another one has a similar effect on the bakers confidence, without pissing people off.
People only tend to remember the systems that annoy them (hence the common but false belief that game DRM only exists on the PC).
Publishers and developers know they are unlikely to ever beat the pirates, they arent really trying to (no matter what they say, as admitting this would lose their finantial backers). They do have a tendancy to miss judge how much people will put up with, and how much something may affct someones experience.
That said I've yet to find a DRM system thats caused me half as much faf and effort per game as alot of DOS games did, or the tranistions to win 95, or to XP ever did.
Most games these days pratically install themselves comapred to Dos days, set themselves up, and even tell you your current drivers are out of date and may not work. In the DOS days half the games required you to make a disk to boot your PC into a state where you could even begin to do any of that, pre universal internet unless you had a mate to do it for you, or with an almost identical set up to you yo had to do that yourslef.
It is true that people remember the most intrusive of DRM. But it has steadily gotten worse over the past 15-20 years. Back then, you didn't have digital distribution, which made things a lot simpler for the publishers.
I think the financial backers are jumping at nothing and their fear of piracy is over-inflated somewhat. If they aren't willing to invest in a game developer, then that is sad but it wouldn't be my place to tell someone how to spend their money.
Mind you, I've heard tales of DRM installing spyware with the game. Though back in the days of DOS based games, I don't think publishers had the gall or expertise to install intrusive spyware on their games.
Though I must ask what games do you refer of when you speak of these old DOS based games? Are we talking about games from era of Rise of the Triad? (which is about the time I started PC gaming.)
Before those days I was pottering about with an Amiga 500 which was given to me from my Uncle "Dodgy" Darren. (Complete with a large selection of pirated games with it - though I should add that all the games I bought after getting it were all legitimate ones.)