Ok let me try just isolating this text.Gutkrusha said:No, I'm not doing it to be self righteous. I'm doing it because I like to cheat and 'hack'/modify my single player games. And I'll be doing that with diablo 3 just the same as the other games I play.bloodychimp said:Thats precisely what the built in cheat codes in SC2 do. There is a whole list of them. They banned people who used the trainer to get achievements as well.Gutkrusha said:I'll buy the game, then I'll get a crack for it.
If I wanna play offline forever, it's my damn prerogative. I like to cheat and modify the product I paid for, and i'll keep doing it. The same thing I said when Blizzard started suing the people cheating their single player in Starcraft 2 applies here. You're just forcing us to different avenues, avenues we're more than happy to go to when we feel wronged. I will enjoy the product I paid for my way. I don't give a flying fuck if you think my account's achievements are important, cause I could care less about them. Lock my achievements at 0, but let me play my game my way.
The more you try to force this totalitarian way to making games on us, the more we're going to find ways around it.
If game companies keep pushing these stupid rules on people, the world is going to have a whole lot more pirates.
Looking just at your posting history, you're on a computer connected to the internet at least every two weeks, which means you're just complaining to be self righteous.
I personally like the advantages that come with non restrictive DRM like Battle.Net and Steam. The ability to download my games wherever and whenever I want, having achievements and unified friends lists with robust community features, and getting fast updates for my games makes up for the HORRIBLE inconvenience of having to log onto the internet once every two weeks (anyone who was a PC gamer 10 years ago knows what I'm talking about with the updates thing, if you got Tribes 2 to patch right on the first go you get a cookie, and the same applies for a lot of other old school PC games)
The way Steam does it is the lesser Evil of DRM, but Steam lets you modify your games if you so choose, Blizzard removes your ability to play their games and then sues you.
Also, those people they banned used the trainers to cheat, not to get achievements. I doubt more than 1%* of those people even cared about them, they just wanted to play how they saw fit.
There are cheats built into StarCraft 2. They just disable the achievements. The only reason to use a trainer as well is if you want the achievements.