How about people being OK with not playing the "shitty game" that isn't worth 60 bucks in the first place. It is one thing to say "hey I'm not going to spend money I earn on this trash." It is another to steal the game (and don't give me that it ain't stealing crap. You take something that you have no rights to and doesn't belong to you without permission that is stealing).Hopeless Bastard said:Yea, everyone should just be okay with being out $60 for a shitty game.LordNue said:Yup, and it will only continue to get worse until people realize that if you don't want to pay for something then you shouldn't play it.
Digital Rights Management. Created in response to piracy that allows copyright holders to set limitations on their digital works such as an app or in this case, a game. It requires an internet connection for authentication purposes and can only be installed 4 or 5 times (Although that number usually resets over time)CokeColaForTheWIn said:Can someone tell me what the hell a DRM is?
Well, EA's Spore had terrible DRM, pirated like mad, and then Sims 3 had much less intrusive DRM, maybe this will be a similar case.LordNue said:Yup, and it will only continue to get worse until people realize that if you don't want to pay for something then you shouldn't play it.LordCuthberton said:PRIATE WINS AGAI- Oh...I see, Game pirates. Not the group.
OT: If they broke that one, surely they will make worse DRM?
Hah, ain't that the truth. You should have seen how many people in the MW2 Boycott group were playing MW2.LordNue said:Boycotts rarely work because no one sticks to them anymore
"Catch a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach and man to feed a fish, and round and round we go." -Not so ancient proverb.FinalDream said:Exactly, we just go around in circles!squid5580 said:Not helpful. The more they crack the uncrackable DRMs the worse the next DRM will be.
"Customers will be required to login via infra-red to an Ubisoft access point, located at over 20 major cities around the world!"squid5580 said:Not helpful. The more they crack the uncrackable DRMs the worse the next DRM will be.
Yes, anyone with any aspiration to play single-player video games should definitely move to an area with broadband coverage to support the asinine and fruitless scheme of some small company where the board is obviously a bunch of evolutionary challenged gits wearing their pants on their heads.Spysix said:It's 2010, everyone should have DSL or something better, that's like a new standard of living.
Um ... what?But saying Ubi isn't a saint or whatever either and deserve this is like saying we shouldn't help children trapped in wells because they shouldn't have been there in the first place or weren't supposed to.
The stupidest parts of your argument have been bolded for self-reflection.Spysix said:It's 2010, everyone should have DSL or something better, that's like a new standard of living. But saying Ubi isn't a saint or whatever either and deserve this is like saying we shouldn't help children trapped in wells because they shouldn't have been there in the first place or weren't supposed to.Samurai Goomba said:Um, good? Ubisoft are essentially screwing customers by selling them a product that won't work for anyone without DSL, and even for THOSE people there have been loads of problems with the DRM itself not working properly.
I'm not saying it's good to pirate, but Ubisoft isn't exactly Mother Theresa here, either. They deserve to have a program cracked which is preventing legit customers from playing a product they purchased. Sure, pirates are taking advantage of this too, but Ubisoft should have known that you cannot create uncrackable DRM.
Ok where in the US that has a gamestop would NOT have internet? Unless you're in the middle of the mountains or some isolated town then why the hell would you be there to play a single player game and if you lived there how would you know of video games? Tv, satellite tv? DSL? Digital Broadcasting? Sounds like a good bet internet can be acquired. And if you were living there in the first place Shouldn't you be doing other activities that involve outside then that would be more fun for you in that lifestyle? The reality is major cities have coverage (please name me cities in the united states that have a permanent internet blackout) I hope that brings you up to speed with THIS reality.Anaphyis said:Yes, anyone with any aspiration to play single-player video games should definitely move to an area with broadband coverage to support the asinine and fruitless scheme of some small company where the board is obviously a bunch of evolutionary challenged gits wearing their pants on their heads.Spysix said:It's 2010, everyone should have DSL or something better, that's like a new standard of living.
Get a globe. Or hell, get a map of your state or even the immediate area and check the broadband coverage. If that doesn't help to sync you up with reality I don't know what will.
Um ... what?But saying Ubi isn't a saint or whatever either and deserve this is like saying we shouldn't help children trapped in wells because they shouldn't have been there in the first place or weren't supposed to.
DRM is Digital Rights Management, it's basically the security measures that software producers use to stop pirates, or attempt to do so.CokeColaForTheWIn said:Can someone tell me what the hell a DRM is?
And the other guy, I don't understand where you got starving children so your sin is assuming things (yeah we're all guilty but I'm not on a crusade or anything, just talking)The stupidest parts of your argument have been bolded for self-reflection.
1. Not everyone lives in America and will have 100% reliable Internet 24/7, and throwing money at this problem will not always fix it. So if you live in Australia or Brazil, it is irrelevant how much money you have, because perfectly reliable Internet may not be available in your area.
2. Your comparison has nothing to do with anything. I fail to see how what you described in any way relates to Ubisoft-an extremely sucessful company aggressively trying to combat illegal copying. There really should be an analogy police. Ubisoft don't want their product copied for free, so they punish paying customers by selling legit consumers a crappy product. Then somebody cracks the stupid DRM that was hurting both customers and pirates (but pirates not as much, since they don't pay money anyway), and you relate this to starving children.
I fail to see how anything you've said in any way refutes my original statement.
HUH? Been playing Ubisoft games for years actually.Cleril said:You haven't known Ubisoft very long have you?Bretty said:I think Ubisoft is no spending some good money on DRM which has been proved useless and detrimental to the customers experience.
I seriously doubt they are going to go much further with this.
In any case this was posted long ago by someone so not really new news.