|
DRM is Killing the PC Gaming Market |
|
|
| Written by Mark C. Barlet, on 14-10-2007 11:08 |
| Editor's rating |
 |
|
| Average user rating |
(0 vote) |
|
| Views |
42792  |
|
|
|
Digital Rights Management, also known
as DRM, is single-handedly destroying PC gaming as we know it. In the
industry there is an ongoing battle between the gaming makers and the
pirates, and the casualty in this battle is the end user. Take the
latest in the gigantic Sims 2 expansion, Bon Voyage: the disk that
contains your game also contains Sony's SecuROM. Reportedly, this has
been crippling computers all over the place. SecuROM has been
reported to disabled your CD/DVD Burner software, your optical drive
itself, printers, cameras, and even crashes the PC outright. The
theory is that ANYTHING that can get media off your PC is the enemy
of this DRM. Now here is the kicker, and here is why we, the consumer
lose: within 24 hours the games release, pirates had
cracked the SecuROM and offered it online for all to download.
AbleGamers is in no way condoning the
theft of software; we want you to go out and buy it so that the
makers of great PC games keep making great PC games.
Let that sink in for a second,
thousands of users all over the world are having their computer destroyed by DRM software. They are being punished by the game publisher for
honestly paying for the software, and those that waited less than a
day could go and download it for free with no issues what so ever.
Can someone tell me how this is a win for the gaming industry? Can anyone tell me how this encourages the end user to go to the store
and buy the game versus just stealing it?
How is the an issue for disabled gamers?
There are many great peripherals on the
market for the disabled gamers. Many of them use on-board memory used
to store data, like what key strokes you assign to which button. Some
DRM software sees these peripherals as an enemy, and can disable
them.
EA, the makers of the current title in
question, released a statement, and according to the responses, EA may
not be forthcoming with the truth of the matter. EA states that they
have only received 41 calls on issues from the DRM software, out of
100,000 copies of the game. A few responses to the post by EA shows
that they may be selectively picking the sources of their numbers,
omitting the 4,146 posts from 883 people on the Sims Forum.
This is not a story about The Sims, or
EA, it is an example of the failure of DRM. It does nothing to stop
those that want to pirate the game and only
harms those that legally bought it.
Recommend this article... Last update: 19-11-2007 11:54
| Published in : Game News, PC Games |
| Keywords : forthcoming, peripherals, selectively, encourages, according, destroyed, publisher, responses, statement, thousands, |
|
|
Users' Comments (25)
|
|
|