Posts Tagged ‘Tages’

Wait for the sunset.

Sunset

No I’m not talking about taking a romantic walk on the beach with your significant other, which can be a very nice thing to do. I am talking about a term called ‘sun setting’. What that means is that the DRM on the game gets removed, its served its purpose, its run its course, and the publishers have decided to release a patch that completely removes the DRM from the game. Its happened before, and it will continue to happen on future games.

The point? If you don’t like DRM, just wait. In fact Josh Lowensohn recently wrote an article titled ‘How to get DRM-free PC games: Just wait’.

Gamers have long known that patience is rewarded with cheaper, less-buggy games. But does that adage hold true for the inclusion of digital rights management as well? Not always, but history does show us that time makes even the strictest of DRM less sucky.

And he’s right. Not all publishers will do this for all games, but it has been done for a number of games already. World in Conflict, which patched out its DRM completely, is one quick example. Some times only parts of a DRM is removed. For example, the removal of the activation limits from BioShock while the general SecuROM remains.

Because there are two ways to purchase games now, retail and digital download, DRM removal may happen on retail, but not digital (such as Dawn of Discovery, which had Tages removed from its retail version, but not its digital one). So you do need to keep an eye out on what is removed.

The problem is not all gamers like to wait, we are a particularly impatient bunch. The reason games sell so well in the first month or two, no matter the DRM on the game, is because we ‘just have to play the game’. Its tough to stand your ground when all your friends are raving about the game, yet you say your waiting till the DRM is removed. Fingers get pointed, names get called, laughing commences, its not a pretty site. However if you can live through the shame of it all, wait. Its not going to kill you and your computer will thank you.

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SecuROM : Examining ‘The Beast’

Mention its name on your average gaming or computer forum, and you’re likely to be greeted with a somewhat emotional response from most people. Let’s try it.

SecuROM.

Yep, that’s pretty much par for the course. It’s insidious, it’s evil, and it’s completely dead set against you. It’s out to ruin your day, ruin your fun, ruin your life.

It may sound like I’m just spewing hyperboles (always a fun game), but if you really believe that’s what I’m doing now, please perform the following experiment. Go to your favourite gaming or computer forum and make an innocent post asking what SecuROM is. Now, give it a day or two to percolate, brace yourself, and check back in to read the replies. And don’t be surprised if you see claims that SecuROM caused a user’s computer to spring to life and sexually assault their pet cat.

Is SecuROM perfect? No. There are legitimate compatibility errors for some people relating directly to the DRM. It has, in the past, used software blacklisting as part of its protection system. It installs itself along with a game, then stays behind long after that game has been removed from your hard drive. However, it also isn’t the demonic force or infection it is too often described as, either. So where does that perception come from?

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In Defense of DRM Vendors

This is actually a revisit to an earlier article I wrote for a different web site. After I wrote that one there was a very large fuss made by some of the staff. Basically, the site was not able to do any work for a few weeks because of this. And this brings up a very important point; some people simply hate DRM, or at least specific DRM companies, because the big complaint about my prior article was that I used SecuROM as an example.

The article I originally wrote is below:

Everybody hates the DRM vendor. They are the ones putting ‘evil stuff’ onto our computers and being mean to us gamers with their restrictions. So gamers generally take a dim view of the DRM vendors and blame them for everything. However, is it really all their fault? Or are they just providing a service?

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