DENUVO ANTI TAMPER CRACKED
True to their word, 3DM released a cracked version of Dragon Age: Inquisition two weeks after the game was shipped.īut the fact Denuvo’s Anti-Tamper Tech was eventually circumvented isn’t really the point, sales & marketing director Thomas Goebl tells me: “We do not position our Anti-Tamper solution as uncrackable, only hard to crack.” “This hints at FIFA 15, DA:I, and Lords of the Fallen being ready for release in the near future.” “After 15 days of work, the 64bit version of Denuvo has been cracked,” they announced in a statement on their site. On 1st December 2014, 3DM made a breakthrough. ATT was so effective that EA also enlisted Denuvo to protect Dragon Age: Inquisition from piracy, likewise City Interactive’s Lords of the Fallen. Historically the FIFA games attracted huge levels of piracy prior to 15, regularly making the top ten most pirated games lists. Check them out, and be done with this piracy business.Īustria-based Denuvo first demonstrated their Anti-Tamper Tech in the wild to protect EA’s FIFA 15 from piracy. You know which games you don’t have to pirate? The best free PC games. The last big announcement from the China-based group was of their frustration trying to get around Denuvo’s Anti-Tamper Tech to crack Just Cause 3, so it seems at least possible that there might be another narrative at play causing 3DM to withdraw from videogame piracy. That’s 3DM’s own spin on the fact that they’re entering a hiatus, at least. Earlier this week the cracking collective 3DM announced that they would no longer be attempting to unshackle single-player games from their DRM protection, leaving the piracy scene for at least a year to assess the repercussions it has on videogame sales.