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.
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?
Neowin generally announce those that are being freed that week. They do not keep a running list though.
PC Gaming Wiki have a page that’s auto generated that tracks games using, and formally using Denuvo.