• scutiger@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Sure, it’s always been a question of time, but Denuvo has been very effective for decades. There were very few people who were able or willing to crack Denuvo games before. Publishers really only cared about the initial release anyway, and after a few months, it wasn’t worth paying for it anymore so they’d remove it from their games.

    • Kalashnikov@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 day ago

      There is no universal law that makes it so that DRM will always be broken. In many cases they are, but in many other cases they aren’t. At the end of the day, they could offload so much of the processing to remote servers that you would basically be playing a cloud game, and that would be the end of bypassing and removal of DRM because they would control the hardware.

      • Rooster326@programming.dev
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        8 hours ago

        They could offload so much of the processing to remote servers that you would basically be playing a cloud game, and that would be the end of bypassing and removal of DRM because they would control the hardware.

        Inb4 someone says “Well I won’t buy it then” realizing nobody gives a fuck. Other people will.