I'd have a greater emotional response if I didn't have to log into Steam every-time I want to play a game. I might be interested to hear if this actually happened but seeing as how you didn't investigate I have no idea what exactly Ubisoft did.
I have here in my hand a list of names of torrenters in congress, the state department, and throughout Hollywood.Savagezion said:I got a kick out of when they said they had a super secret source that can positively identify pirates with 100% accuracy but couldn't disclose how or even who this source was. LOL. I guess it works on people gullible enough to believe there is an internet police.
How exactly does that work? Because every time I try to play Assassin's Creed 2, it logs me into Uplay and then freezes the game when I finally get in because the internet connection here is shit. I haven't even seen a "play offline" feature.Woodsey said:Uplay needs a login and an online check once, then you're good to go. It's not exactly the most heinous of additions, even if it does seem somewhat pointless to reapply it to a game whose time has easily come and gone on.
What this guy said. It's like Steam in that sense really, since with Steam you have to login and save your credentials on your computer if you wish to play your games offline. UPlay isn't much different at all...Woodsey said:Uplay needs a login and an online check once, then you're good to go. It's not exactly the most heinous of additions, even if it does seem somewhat pointless to reapply it to a game whose time has easily come and gone on.
My uni blocks Steam and Uplay during the day so I play Far Cry 3 offline all the time, it just defaults to offline mode straight away for me. Their whole catalogue should do the same.LetalisK said:I'm at the point I hope Ubisoft just burns to the ground. They've fucked me harder than any other game company has.
How exactly does that work? Because every time I try to play Assassin's Creed 2, it logs me into Uplay and then freezes the game when I finally get in because the internet connection here is shit. I haven't even seen a "play offline" feature.Woodsey said:Uplay needs a login and an online check once, then you're good to go. It's not exactly the most heinous of additions, even if it does seem somewhat pointless to reapply it to a game whose time has easily come and gone on.
Going through my other Ubisoft games, I guess it depends on the game. For example, my Assassin's Creed Brotherhood has a little "Play Offline" button on the launcher, which my AC2 doesn't have. After looking up more stuff on the internet, I guess they don't manage all their games the same. Bleh. >.<Woodsey said:My uni blocks Steam and Uplay during the day so I play Far Cry 3 offline all the time, it just defaults to offline mode straight away for me. Their whole catalogue should do the same.LetalisK said:I'm at the point I hope Ubisoft just burns to the ground. They've fucked me harder than any other game company has.
How exactly does that work? Because every time I try to play Assassin's Creed 2, it logs me into Uplay and then freezes the game when I finally get in because the internet connection here is shit. I haven't even seen a "play offline" feature.Woodsey said:Uplay needs a login and an online check once, then you're good to go. It's not exactly the most heinous of additions, even if it does seem somewhat pointless to reapply it to a game whose time has easily come and gone on.
Are you sure the game isn't just crashing, or does it actually say that the game's stopping until you can reconnect?
That's patently not true, the most seeded versions are the original and Enhanced Edition, DRM free from GoG. That is the current situation still, I just checked.Vivi22 said:You do realize that the version of the Witcher 2 being circulated on Torrent sites was a cracked version of the DRM copy right?
You missed little, if anything. Many of the achievements necessary for unlocking user profile pictures do not work correctly.Jandau said:Yeah, this is why many PC gamers have an instinctive aversion to Ubisoft games. They are dicks to the PC consumers, then when this reflects on sales they just blame it on piracy and double up on the DRM, driving more people away and so on and so forth.
I rarely buy anything from Ubisoftr and when I do I crack it. I don't care about lost functionality, I just want to play my game without being constantly fucked by the always-online crap. A good example - Anno 2070. I cracked the game when I got it. This meant that a few features weren't available, but I found it to be an acceptable loss for being able to play in peace.
You say it's patently not true, but that's not what CD Projekt Red said here: http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/116242-Witcher-Studio-Chief-Vows-No-More-DRMGoaThief said:That's patently not true, the most seeded versions are the original and Enhanced Edition, DRM free from GoG. That is the current situation still, I just checked.Vivi22 said:You do realize that the version of the Witcher 2 being circulated on Torrent sites was a cracked version of the DRM copy right?
Thing is, you don't have to believe either person. You can, perfectly legally, go and find out for yourself. It'd take about 30 seconds.Vivi22 said:You say it's patently not true, but that's not what CD Projekt Red said here: http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/116242-Witcher-Studio-Chief-Vows-No-More-DRMGoaThief said:That's patently not true, the most seeded versions are the original and Enhanced Edition, DRM free from GoG. That is the current situation still, I just checked.Vivi22 said:You do realize that the version of the Witcher 2 being circulated on Torrent sites was a cracked version of the DRM copy right?
Now between you who make a statement while providing no sources to back it up and the company with a vested interest in investigating the piracy of its game, who do you think I should believe? Now maybe things changed since then and the DRM free version from GOG was being passed around eventually and still is now, but that doesn't negate the fact that CD Projekt Red themselves confirmed that the DRM version was cracked almost immediately and was the first one popping up on torrent sites.
That's what I thought. -_-ShinyCharizard said:It seems that I've been warned not to advocate piracy. I'd like to point out that I was not advocating piracy and that there is a big difference between downloading a game for free and removing the DRM from a game you purchased legally.
Which was pulled straight from the ass of a developer, and would have made it as popular as the top franchise games that year--more than quite a few of them. The fact that it was admittedly a hyperbolic claim and the absurdity of its competition--in some cases with games that also had no DRM--should be setting off a little warning light for you.Rednog said:The estimated piracy rate was about 5 copies for every single sale
Prove it, all that means is a list of suspects, not perps. I can get a list of names in congress, state dept, and Hollywood who are "confirmed" extra terrestrials if I wanted one. The point is that there isn't any accurate way to trace piracy without massive invasion of privacy. To claim that you can trace it with 100% accuracy is extreme BS. If it were even remotely true Media producers would be shouting it from the rooftops and getting sentencing laws passed. But instead 1 developer says it and claims they can't reveal how or even who is involved because it would "damage their reputation" opposed to making them the most successful & popular DRM ever.Mycroft Holmes said:I have here in my hand a list of names of torrenters in congress, the state department, and throughout Hollywood.Savagezion said:I got a kick out of when they said they had a super secret source that can positively identify pirates with 100% accuracy but couldn't disclose how or even who this source was. LOL. I guess it works on people gullible enough to believe there is an internet police.
Anyone can go and confirm this for themselves, I would have thought it's obvious why I haven't linked directly to torrent websites. Does it really need spelling out for you? If you can't be bothered to go check for yourself then I'll be happy to provide evidence outside of this website. Feel free to contact me elsewhere.Vivi22 said:You say it's patently not true, but that's not what CD Projekt Red said here: http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/116242-Witcher-Studio-Chief-Vows-No-More-DRMGoaThief said:That's patently not true, the most seeded versions are the original and Enhanced Edition, DRM free from GoG. That is the current situation still, I just checked.Vivi22 said:You do realize that the version of the Witcher 2 being circulated on Torrent sites was a cracked version of the DRM copy right?
Now between you who make a statement while providing no sources to back it up
... And its distribution format? Think about it.and the company with a vested interest in investigating the piracy of its game
Not sure if it just wasn't an obvious enough reference or if nobody at all remembers the dark but extremely important events in US history succeeding the Wheeler Speech. Either way, this still calls for a House UnUbisoft Activities Committee.Savagezion said:Prove it, all that means is a list of suspects, not perps. I can get a list of names in congress, state dept, and Hollywood who are "confirmed" extra terrestrials if I wanted one. The point is that there isn't any accurate way to trace piracy without massive invasion of privacy. To claim that you can trace it with 100% accuracy is extreme BS. If it were even remotely true Media producers would be shouting it from the rooftops and getting sentencing laws passed. But instead 1 developer says it and claims they can't reveal how or even who is involved because it would "damage their reputation" opposed to making them the most successful & popular DRM ever.Mycroft Holmes said:I have here in my hand a list of names of torrenters in congress, the state department, and throughout Hollywood.Savagezion said:I got a kick out of when they said they had a super secret source that can positively identify pirates with 100% accuracy but couldn't disclose how or even who this source was. LOL. I guess it works on people gullible enough to believe there is an internet police.