‘Doom: The Dark Ages’ DRM Is Locking Out Linux Users Who Bought the Game [404 Media] (www.404media.co)
from theangriestbird@beehaw.org to gaming@beehaw.org on 17 May 05:45
https://beehaw.org/post/20042317

#gaming

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Lembot_0002@lemm.ee on 17 May 05:52 next collapse

Universal release rule: the program is considered released only after it is DRM-free.

narc0tic_bird@lemm.ee on 17 May 06:42 next collapse

Jup, I just never buy games with Denuvo these days.

Under Windows, the 5 machine activations per 24 hours limit they impose wasn’t something I ever hit, but under Linux it’s kind of easy because, as the article states, switching Proton versions counts as a machine activation to Denuvo.

Ah, Microsoft. Just when I thought you understood how to properly release a game with South of Midnight and TES: Oblivion Remastered: Steam Deck verified, no Denuvo or other intrusive DRM (doesn’t mean the games are DRM free), available on multiple storefronts. Along comes Doom and they just couldn’t resist Denuvo. Idiots.

Lembot_0002@lemm.ee on 17 May 06:53 next collapse

Along comes Doom and they just couldn’t resist Denuvo.

The important question is whether we, players, could resist Denuvo. Most of us fail in even more obvious shit-showeling.

domi@lemmy.secnd.me on 17 May 07:50 collapse

Doom 2016 launched with a 44k player peak on Steam, Doom Eternal with a 100k peak and Doom: The Dark Ages only got a 30k peak.

Either most people play on Game Pass, think the game is too expensive, don’t have raytracing compatible hardware or don’t like Denuvo.

Whatever it is, the game doesn’t seem to be doing so great.

Poopfeast420@discuss.tchncs.de on 17 May 08:15 collapse

Eternal had Denuvo, but it was removed a year ago, so it probably doesn’t have to do anything with the lower numbers on Steam.

My guess is mainly price and RT.

stephen01king@lemmy.zip on 17 May 15:23 collapse

Or people didn’t care about Denuvo back then, but they are more wary about buying games with Denuvo now.

Poopfeast420@discuss.tchncs.de on 17 May 16:57 collapse

Dragons Dogma 2 has Denuvo and a 230k peak. Wukong has Denuvo and 2.4 million peak. FIFA 25, Denuvo, 110k peak (all three just from Steam).

“Normal people” don’t care about DRM.

stephen01king@lemmy.zip on 17 May 17:26 collapse

Yeah, maybe you’re right.

Poopfeast420@discuss.tchncs.de on 17 May 08:21 collapse

Under Windows, the 5 machine activations per 24 hours limit they impose wasn’t something I ever hit, but under Linux it’s kind of easy because, as the article states, switching Proton versions counts as a machine activation to Denuvo.

That limit isn’t mandatory with Denuvo and Doom apparently doesn’t have it. On Steam some games mention a limit on the store page, like Atomfall, Atomic Heart or a few Assassin’s Creed games.

The Dark Ages EULA does mention something like Denuvo “may” limit installations, but then never says anything else.

cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 17 May 10:01 next collapse

why is there drm and anti cheating on a single player game

ElectroLisa@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 17 May 13:47 collapse

DRM - Copy protection Anti-cheat - Data harvesting, albeit Doom doesn’t have one

DebatableRaccoon@lemmy.ca on 17 May 14:22 next collapse

This is why we don’t support games with malware in them.

teawrecks@sopuli.xyz on 17 May 16:56 next collapse

Yep, this is an old problem with Denuvo, new proton version looks like a new system. I guess if the containerization is perfect, Denuvo won’t be able to solve this and retain the same functionality.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 17 May 18:02 next collapse

ok, piracy it is then, thanks.

nullpotential@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 18 May 10:26 next collapse

My inability to afford a GPU with raytracing is locking me out of the game.

belated_frog_pants@beehaw.org on 18 May 23:10 collapse

Cool i wont be buying it then. DRM only hurts legit customers