More criticism:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4yIxUOWrtw
Printable View
More criticism:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4yIxUOWrtw
Those videos are great, watched them all sometime ago. There's one about quake and half-life too.
The latest hint is "Just roll the dice and pew-pew-pew the shit out of them!". Some people think it means Homefront The Revolution will be the next game to be cracked.
They're actually really good with these hints. I have no idea what could it be. But I do hope hope it's not Homefront. That games look really garbage, and not worth their time IMO!
don't bust my bubble yoco :P
could be, but its not about cracking only the games they like, the goal is cracking all protected gamesQuote:
Originally Posted by yoco
no, the goal is cracking only the games they like.
everyone else should be grateful that they are releasing anything at all, let alone making people aware of their cracks.
---------- Post Merged at 19:00 ---------- Previous Post was at 18:45 ----------
incidentally, battlefield was released today, but cpy themselves have requested a nuke tag due to their installer being buggy. fix on the way.
Yes, when they said roll the dice, it was about the battlefield developer series DICE.
if you meant: 'only the games that they want to crack', i'd agreeQuote:
Originally Posted by takomania
you really think you know what everyone else should be doing? :PQuote:
everyone else should be grateful
it goes both ways: people want 'what they have to offer' and they want to offer it, its basic demand/supply scenarioQuote:
let alone making people aware of their cracks
yup, i agree completely!
i think you've misunderstood me. the fact is that most software crackers do it for the challenge, therefore people should be happy that anyone takes time out of their life to do this, and not feel that they are entitled to make demands.
this is something that really saddens me as the growing attitude across many sites is that end users are entitled to cheaper or free software, cracked or pirated versions of media the second it is released and perks or bonuses in return for doing nothing but consuming products in general. if people are paying for a service, yes, they have leverage depending on the scenario; but when people are getting things for free, so many seem to forget that someone is putting in their time and energy in to making that happen (i don't mean anyone here, as we wouldn't even be having this discussion in the first place :) )
i don't believe that to be a huge factor, unless you're focusing on p2p groups. don't forget that scene groups don't focus on bittorrent as a distribution method so they have nothing to prove to 'the masses' - fulfilling the demand/supply side of things gains individuals respect in the microcosms in which they operate - something which can in some cases grant you financial perks depending on your ethics, but (and i'm just thinking piracy) there's so many games and applications that have never been cracked over the last 25 years which did have considerable demand - not because they couldn't be done, but just down to issues such as super frequent updates or heavy reliance on remote servers.
p2p groups seem to be demand/supply orientated, from what i've seen.
Denuvo screws themselves.
https://torrentfreak.com/crackers-sw...mation-170205/
i got your idea the first time around, yet you're still telling people what they should be doing, how about letting them decide for themselvesQuote:
Originally Posted by takomania
the idea of what software ought to look like or offer is changing in this digital age - some of it is related to the fact that companies are artificially inflating prices while distributing mere copies with very little added costsQuote:
the growing attitude across many sites is that end users are entitled to cheaper or free software
materialistic things are not free (even if they do not arrive with a price tag), it takes time, energy, effort, hardware,... to deal with them, even for the mere consumersQuote:
when people are getting things for free
so scene has demand for certain digital data and scene groups are supplying - groups desire fame (demand), scene is the place to get it (supply)Quote:
i don't believe that to be a huge factor, unless you're focusing on p2p groups...they have nothing to prove to 'the masses'
p2p has demand for that data as well and people leaking it are supplying
scene sites have rules, scene groups have to comply and prove themselves
p2p is creating pressure, scene needs to show they can do it better, ie. still proving themselves
it works in other areas as well: for whatever you do (supply), there is an appropriate demand to go with it - and vice versa, these two things go hand in hand, like yin and yang, basic dualities they are
Fuck yea, I was hoping they'll crack this soon! :top:Quote:
Tales Of Berseria-CPY
I hope more Denuvo Games will show up since the Denuvo Website leak