Counting only games in the modern era, when Denuvo started to charge monthly fees. And of course it might vary from game to game depending on sales, but…
I know that Square-Enix often removes it six months after release, and at a glance it looks like 2K often removes it roughly a year after release.
I’m curious if anyone has tracked this for other games so we can have a sense of which games are likely to have it removed when. I was eying a game when it suddenly occurred to me to think “wait, doesn’t this company usually remove Denuvo around now?”
It might even be useful to create a tracking document of games where Denuvo has been removed by the publisher, divided by publisher (and perhaps with a few other notes that might affect it, like Steam review, metacritic, or sales figures if we can find them) to help us get a sense of where things stand in that regard.
PC Gaming Wiki have a page that’s auto generated that tracks games using, and formally using Denuvo.
Neowin generally announce those that are being freed that week. They do not keep a running list though.
New Lemmy Post: Is there a list somewhere tracking when specific companies normally remove Denuvo from their games? (https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/9270558)
Tagging: #Piracy(Replying in the OP of this thread (NOT THIS BOT!) will appear as a comment in the lemmy discussion.)
I am a FOSS bot. Check my README: https://github.com/db0/lemmy-tagginator/blob/main/README.md
This bot seems like a bad idea. It mucks up Lemmy discussions with bot comments in the hope that they get noticed on Mastodon.
Why not have a bot repost to Mastodon so you’re not spamming the people who already saw it?
Why not have a bot repost to Mastodon so you’re not spamming the people who already saw it?
Because that doesn’t allow interaction between communities. Ideally there will eventually be a method to enable this type of interaction without a bot connecting them. In the meantime you can block the bot like I did, and then you only have to see people complaining about it like you did.
How does spamming a Lemmy post with a hashtag help publicize it to Mastodon?
If the point is to make it visible on Mastodon, why not post it there?