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Re: That doesn't make any sense. Wibble Send a noteboard - 20/02/2010 09:04:53 PM
First things first, if a game company doesn't want to publish on the PC, they don't need to. They can simply choose not to do it. There isn't a need to go out of their way to destroy it. In fact, ceasing to publish PC games would destroy it a hell of a lot faster than all the DRM in the world could dream of.


Agreed. But what kind of backlash would a publisher get if they announced one day they had decided to simply stop producing PC games? The internet would be screaming in 30seconds flat and the negative press and badwill would be enormous. It's not worth that kind of publicity, therefore something like DRM which pisses people off but is a fight against pirates and other enemies of the industry can be used instead.

Second, releasing a PC version allows piracy to bite into the sales of console games as well. If Joe Schmoe pirate has a deent gaming computer, why should he buy a console game when he can just pirate the PC version? But if the PC version doesn't exist, then he needs to get it for the console instead.


Exactly. That is my point, games publishers would far rather sell console versions, bigger profits, less hastle from vocal minority, much harder to pirate as you need to mod chip etc.

Also, what do you mean by "technical manipulation?"


PC users are more aware of what is running on their PC and what it is doing. So if a trojan in disguise of DRM or anti-cheating software is installed they know about it pretty fast, they know what it does, they know how to stop it if they so choose, and it's all over the web in a day. If a game mutliplayer game uses resources to run a server rather than using a company server, they know it and look for the best PCs to run this etc. Your average console user sticks the game in plays, has no idea what data is collected, how it is used, never considers that the companies can modify with their property, until something like the xbox chip zapping comes to light.

Mostly, saying that game companies specifically want to wipe out PC gaming is a pretty outrageous claim. Could you explain your reasoning a bit more?


Console = higher profits, less piracy. The vast majority of publishers would rather people play on console than PC. Throw in that every study i've seen shows that DRM on pc games not only fails to stop piracy, but actually increases it and leads to the alienation of legitimate customers like myself...and why are they doing it?

Maybe it's not to destroy PC gaming, but to destroy non=online bought/played PC gaming. The lack of shelf space given to PC games these days would be a testament to it's falling market share. Publishers are all about online transactions, micro transactions and copying the WoW model these days, and that can be a sad thing for single player gaming.
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Ubisoft DRM (Or how to make sure I never buy your product again) - 19/02/2010 05:54:02 PM 724 Views
I don't think these companies realize they're encouraging piracy. - 19/02/2010 06:11:51 PM 721 Views
Totally. Thank god for cracks - 19/02/2010 06:22:16 PM 508 Views
Yep. I have been unable to understand the company reasoning behind such systems. - 19/02/2010 06:54:22 PM 475 Views
There is only one reason I can see. To destroy PC Gaming - 19/02/2010 06:59:45 PM 521 Views
That doesn't make any sense. - 19/02/2010 10:53:50 PM 540 Views
Re: That doesn't make any sense. - 20/02/2010 09:04:53 PM 492 Views
Agree on the functionality complaints, disagree on the ownership bit. - 23/02/2010 11:40:06 PM 497 Views
Is that really how you play games? - 24/02/2010 10:54:42 PM 529 Views
Yeah, I rarely replay old games. - 25/02/2010 12:48:10 AM 516 Views
Huh, I guess I am special. *NM* - 25/02/2010 12:53:31 AM 254 Views
How boring. - 25/02/2010 07:32:19 AM 478 Views
That really depends on the game. - 25/02/2010 04:30:32 PM 530 Views
Re: That really depends on the game. - 27/02/2010 01:54:38 AM 540 Views
It will kill PC gaming. - 25/02/2010 12:06:12 AM 510 Views
Precisely. - 27/02/2010 01:56:00 AM 531 Views
on a side note - 24/02/2010 10:49:29 PM 496 Views

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