- Jul 25, 2004
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Sad thing is, this can have drawbacks. I forgot what game it was, but as an anti piracy measure, some developer put in bugs and glitches that would only activate if you pirated the game. Lo and behold, forums were flooded with people claiming that the game sucked because of all the bugs, with all the legit users going "wtf no issues here".
But the crying about the bugs apparently really hurt the games reputation
as an anti piracy measure, some developer put in bugs and glitches that would only activate if you pirated the game. Lo and behold, forums were flooded with people claiming that the game sucked because of all the bugs, with all the legit users going "wtf no issues here".
But the crying about the bugs apparently really hurt the games reputation
Another like that was the original DarkStar. I owned the game and still had the "your a pirate" glitches occuring.
Even had to send in a copy of the box to prove I owned the game to get some help. In the end it turned out that the anti pirating check was triggering as I had a virtual drive enabled (it was that or it found a CD drive without the game disk in it). Either way, I think even people with two optical drives were having the issues I was having.
Definitly a crap system. Good game otherwise but i've told everyone that was interested in it to stay away from it.
Starforce killed one of my CD burners some years ago. Fuckers.StarForce used to wreak all kinds of havoc with its hidden, virtual drive emulation drivers, if I recall.
Several DRM methods will disallow a game's activation and function if ANY kind of drive emulation software is installed. SecuRom comes to mind. I think some versions of TAGES do as well. StarForce used to wreak all kinds of havoc with its hidden, virtual drive emulation drivers, if I recall.
Best defense against that crap? Stop. Buying. Products. That. Use. Them. I've said it before and I'll say it again, complaining about DRM/etc in a game, then buying the game anyway is completely pointless. You are sending the message to the publisher that you'll continue to buy their games with their draconian DRM, that their actions are ok.
Starforce killed one of my CD burners some years ago. Fuckers.
Best defense against that crap? Stop. Buying. Products. That. Use. Them.
True, but not like the manufacture/publisher goes out of their way to tell you what DRM the game has before you purchase it. I find the best way to find out is to visit the sites offering the pirated version and reading the comments. Not a good way to keep the customer informated.
Hardcore mode: Play through the entire game with invincible scorpion chasing you.
(j/k, don't be a dick, support the developers and buy the game)
Dark Souls did this too iirc, by invading the world of players who broke street date with max level characters.
Starforce was a pain. I usually get no-dvd patches and remember trying to find one for one of the Splinter Cell games and wasn't able to get one for a while.