So, with recent reports on two rather prominent games being leaked way ahead of their release schedule, and the corresponding number of threads coming up, there's an annoyingly wide-spread misconception I'd like to do away with.
When a game get's released, someone buys it, breaks the drm, and then puts it on the net, that's your common piracy. And yes, that's the pirates fault.
When a game get's cracked and uploaded a week before it's release, then it's someone in the printing or at some retailer thinking he's a pirate, and violating the trust bestowed upon him. That's partly the pirates fault for creating a certain demand, but mostly a handful of douchebags.
If a game gets leaked six entire weeks ahead of it's release, it's someone at the dev team, feeling underpayed, having an argument with his boss or being a general dick. And that's not the pirates fault, it's the fault of a single individual, trying to damage the very company he's working for. That doesn't give developers the excuse to instate draconic drm, nor to abandon platforms, and it's not the pirates fault when they do.
Can we just please remember that the next fifty times the matter is going to be discussed?
When a game get's released, someone buys it, breaks the drm, and then puts it on the net, that's your common piracy. And yes, that's the pirates fault.
When a game get's cracked and uploaded a week before it's release, then it's someone in the printing or at some retailer thinking he's a pirate, and violating the trust bestowed upon him. That's partly the pirates fault for creating a certain demand, but mostly a handful of douchebags.
If a game gets leaked six entire weeks ahead of it's release, it's someone at the dev team, feeling underpayed, having an argument with his boss or being a general dick. And that's not the pirates fault, it's the fault of a single individual, trying to damage the very company he's working for. That doesn't give developers the excuse to instate draconic drm, nor to abandon platforms, and it's not the pirates fault when they do.
Can we just please remember that the next fifty times the matter is going to be discussed?