That. And worse, the Hamburgler is out back giving away better, slap-free burgers for free.Iron Lightning said:This is like if McDonalds decided to slap you in the face before they let you have a happy meal.
That. And worse, the Hamburgler is out back giving away better, slap-free burgers for free.Iron Lightning said:This is like if McDonalds decided to slap you in the face before they let you have a happy meal.
We hate it because in reality whenever someone makes some sort of DRM it takes hacker at most a few months to crack it. With this always on DRM it's just a matter of redirecting the server check to a virtual server that never exists anywhere but on your own computer using a special program. However the ones who actually buy the game will have problems with this years after they bought the game. Those who have gaming laptops and play while they're away from home wont be able to play it on locations such as the train. If Ubisoft's servers shut down you lose your unsaved progress, Civilization V actually lots a star from one reviewer because that kept happening over and over. Also as you said yourself. Some of us got bad internet connections. I've been on a connection where I get decent download and upload speeds, but it often disconnects for a few seconds. That has bugged me a lot playing online games since it results in lag or even being disconnected. That is OK however since in a FPS or a MMO all progress is saved on the server so nothing is lost but a few minutes where I restart the game. If this happened in a mission while I was playing Saints Row 2 however I would get really pissed at losing my progress because my internet sucks.Twilight_guy said:You know what I want to see? an actual discussion of what this DRM means. I've seen lots of people who instantly sputter a gut reaction and condemn it immediately but that's incredibly short sighted. There are lots of issues to discuss here, not the lest of which is why people hate it so much (and don't give me that crap about you just hate DRM or your internet connection sucks there is more to it and you know it). I want to know why people keep blasting DRM and why stories keep getting put it. Its not about simply hating the thing, this is on the level of a zealot crusade and I want to know why. As far as I'm concerned though, it's never going to happen because people are just too angry to talk all they can do is yell. Ah well, maybe DRM should treat use like means spirited children, we sure act like it.
I don't see why you can't start your own thread, there are plenty of people HERE discussing previous, relatively successful DRM schemes, that, while they have never worked fully, didn't fail to stop piracy AND take away from the finished product. Do you not think THIS: http://www.escapistmagazine.com/videos/view/extra-credits/2653-Piracy shows that there are no people willing to talk about DRM? Gabe Newel, someone who runs a company who has modernized a DRM system into something many people love, has been quoted here in video form discussing why his form of DRM is successful, by making it easier to access a product. Most modern DRM does not understand that, In fact, that has been a common theme of this thread. I personally think that the CD key, checking itself online to confirm it isn't a pirate version when an internet connection becomes available is the way to go.Twilight_guy said:I realize my post was very long but I knew I was going to have to make the same argument several times and I wanted to be able to refer people up to similar arguments.BRex21 said:Snip.
I know DRM sucks and I want it to be fixed. I want people to stop yelling and I want it to stop sucking. I really do. Publishers aren't going to give it up because pirates pirate there games and pirates aren't going to give up because they dislike DRM or can produce a better product by removing DRM (and because some of them are dicks who would pirate the humble indie bundle).
Maybe this isn't the right thread to make an argument about DRM in general but honestly there is no right thread, anywhere. The Escapist doesn't publish stories on issues that are that broad and If I tried to make a thread about discussion DRM within one page it would degenerate from "how to make good DRM" to a mass of people complaining that all DRM is always bad. I see DRM has a enormously ham fisted and futile attempt to try and control something that doesn't fit with conventional methods. Controlling data is like trying to control the tide. Yet I know that the goal of all technology is to improve and get better and I think there is someway to salvage DRM and make it in a way that people will accept it, to improve it. Yet nobody will listen. Even my initial thread immediately had ten negative responses and 1 neutral or middling positive response. I just want to be able to talk about this in a way where I won't feel like an outcast for having an opinion. I don't like having the opinion that everyone despises but I can't not have it. I know you don't understand but at least grant me the knowledge that you understand I have an opinion and you can agree to disagree even if you think I'm irrational.
Because it's the internet, everything is serious business. However, the most obvious issue with DRM like Ubisoft's is that by trying to protect their game they are greatly inconveniencing their paying customers, while those that pirate the game get not only the game for free, but an arguably better playing experience overall due to not having to jump through hoops. They are punishing the people that pay them monies because they want more people to pay them monies. It's a completely backwards-ass approach to any semblance of customer appreciation/service.Twilight_guy said:You know what I want to see? an actual discussion of what this DRM means. I've seen lots of people who instantly sputter a gut reaction and condemn it immediately but that's incredibly short sighted. There are lots of issues to discuss here, not the lest of which is why people hate it so much (and don't give me that crap about you just hate DRM or your internet connection sucks there is more to it and you know it). I want to know why people keep blasting DRM and why stories keep getting put it. Its not about simply hating the thing, this is on the level of a zealot crusade and I want to know why. As far as I'm concerned though, it's never going to happen because people are just too angry to talk all they can do is yell. Ah well, maybe DRM should treat use like means spirited children, we sure act like it.
I'm pretty certain it was cracked in less than 6 months. It was 2 months at most.dochmbi said:Ubisofts DRM caused me to buy AC2, when normally I would not have. It took 6 weeks to crack it and I got tired of waiting after 2 weeks (normlly games get cracked in less than a day). So as far as I'm concerned, the DRM scheme was a success, but I'm probably one of the only people in the world it affected like it was supposed to.
Steam isn't overtly DRM. You can still play your games offline, and ultimately Steam is probably the best example of the idea that when you take away something, you offer a service that's just better. We've come a long ways from the dark ages of steam.Twilight_guy said:Newell also has his hands on a proprietary DRM that everyone supports. I'm getting tired of saying this over and over but gamers are being shortsighted. Not everyone is going to use Steam's DRM and not everyone is willing to just go DRM free. DRM isn't going to go away because gamers kick and scream unless they organize a boycott on DRM games (which will probably kill several large studios) which no boycott of gamers has ever work ever. Therefor if we have to work with DRM we can at least go from one line "lol, drm fail" posts to an intelligent discussion. "this DRM failed because it was invasive, how could it be designed better?" rather then "Ubisoft fails again, lol asscreed sucks." I want something more then a gaggle of idiots treating the Escapist as if it was the goddamn TF2 forum on the Valve website. I want a website that pride itself on having a brain to show it. I'm not going to sit on my opinion that this is short sighted and do nothing.
Saying Steam isn't DRM or at least contains the components of DRM is like saying that a whale isn't a mammal. I don't know what "overtly" is supposed to mean but Steam is the most successful DRM ever. Also, most DRM, even Ubisoft's isn't shoddily coded, shoddy coding mean it doesn't work. If it was shoddily coded it wouldn't let you play even when the servers were up and the DRM would have been a much bigger fiasco (like 6 o'clock news big since that would be a major fuck-up). It's less about how well its coded and more about whether people support the core idea. They do for Steam but rarely do for anything else. Normally I wouldn't make such a big issue but the coder in me knows that their is a difference between good code and a good program. Maybe it's just because people can use offline mode or maybe it's because people trust Valve even though it has a monopoly and could in theory lock all games at the snap of their fingers. I dunno but I think popular opinion is the biggest threat to any future DRM plans. DRM seems like a more politically charged issue then the economy at times.acosn said:Steam isn't overtly DRM. You can still play your games offline, and ultimately Steam is probably the best example of the idea that when you take away something, you offer a service that's just better. We've come a long ways from the dark ages of steam.Twilight_guy said:Newell also has his hands on a proprietary DRM that everyone supports. I'm getting tired of saying this over and over but gamers are being shortsighted. Not everyone is going to use Steam's DRM and not everyone is willing to just go DRM free. DRM isn't going to go away because gamers kick and scream unless they organize a boycott on DRM games (which will probably kill several large studios) which no boycott of gamers has ever work ever. Therefor if we have to work with DRM we can at least go from one line "lol, drm fail" posts to an intelligent discussion. "this DRM failed because it was invasive, how could it be designed better?" rather then "Ubisoft fails again, lol asscreed sucks." I want something more then a gaggle of idiots treating the Escapist as if it was the goddamn TF2 forum on the Valve website. I want a website that pride itself on having a brain to show it. I'm not going to sit on my opinion that this is short sighted and do nothing.
People get behind Steam because it's a DRM that isn't shoddily coded and as a whole isn't really problematic. In four years of use I haven't really had a problem with it, ever.