To everyone saying "Good, this will teach them." Or anything along this lines-
Not everyone who downloads a crack, has pirated the game.
I personally use cracks, because I dont believe in letting mommy know you want to play a game, and when I double click a game icon, I Expect it to launch that game. I also want to future proof myself for the day when you cant download the game (however unlikely that may be.)Its allready bad enough that I have to wait through 4+splash pages telling me who made the game.
But first and foremost, i use it for the tracking. Steam has No Business knowing how long I play a game, and what ido in that game. I just want to play and chill.
You may say "oh, but you are in the minority, who cares about track7ng?"
I point you to this article-
http://www.ign.com/articles/2015/11/18/145-of-fallout-4-pc-players-still-havent-left-the-vault
14.5% of fallout 4 players havent left the vault on pc. Guess why steam cant tell why Some of them have left the vault? Sure some of them might have had the trophy unlock, but not all of them
And screw trophies anyways, I dont care. You dont need to tell me how to play a game. The only reason they exist is to track you, and make you feel attached to your account.
But then again, I know im different from most folk, specifically because I make a steam/uplay/origin account Per Game. Along with emails. Because by god, if I want to sell it, or let a friend play it I will.
Three days ago, I bought Champion return to arms for the Ps2 for an outrageous $25 (and thats a good price, it normally goes for $30+) I had no problems paying for it. That shows that if you make a good game, people will pay for it, no matter how long its been out. But if you make them jump through 8 million hoops, they change their mind.
And stopping cracks wont even stop piracy! All you have to is buy the game, make an account, download it, block the the game from going online with your firewall, and request a refund!
Note-I am not condoning or admitting to piracy of any kind. As "Cracks" are not owned or copyrighted, they cannot be "pirated".