Seems all the people who said they will be pirating Dragon Age Inquisition will be in for a long wait as Bioware is using the same protection as Lords of the Fallen.
I'm glad I got a small discount to buy the deluxe version last week, and I can't wait to play the game on the 17th at 11PM. I'm pre-loadig the 23 GB game as I write this.
Link- http://forum.bioware.com/topic/519257-denuvo-drm-used-by-dai/page-4
I'm glad I got a small discount to buy the deluxe version last week, and I can't wait to play the game on the 17th at 11PM. I'm pre-loadig the 23 GB game as I write this.
Link- http://forum.bioware.com/topic/519257-denuvo-drm-used-by-dai/page-4
To put it bluntly you can not hack the EXE file to make a crack.To be clear, Denuvo is not DRM in the sense the DRM stands for Digital Rights Management (or Dogs Reading Magazines, or whatever you prefer). There is nothing in the Denuvo stuff that has to do with accounts or release date checking, or ownership or anything like that. It is not SecuROM. It is not Steamworks. It is not Safedisc, or any of the other DRM solutions that have been in the past. Origin is the DRM for Dragon Age: Inquisition in the exact same manner and settings as it was in Mass Effect 3. Nothing has changed here.
Denuvo is anti-tamper on the executable. This has nothing to do with mods or attempts to change textures or anything like that. Trying to hack the executable to cheat in multiplayer? This is what we are talking about.
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