
No doubt another irritating anti-piracy program will eventually rise from Denuvo’s ashes, but for now, the world is at peace (at least in terms of DRM on Borderlands games). Those who had framerate issues and stuttering problems reported those problems still existed for them…though they were grateful to just be rid of Denuvo no matter the circumstances. According to the documents, Denuvo is charging a license fee of 140,000 euros for the first twelve months after the games release, and 2,000. It shows that a half-life of the DRM system is in line with the market. As of this week a new update patch will remove Denuvo’s DRM, in theory providing better performance for the game itself.īut does it? Early impressions posted online suggest there is no noticeable difference between a Borderlands 3 with an obnoxious DRM mechanic running in the background, and one without. The price structure of the contract between the DRM provider and Crytek for Crysis Remastered (test) reveals the price structure. Despite Denuvo’s promises, it took mere weeks for a pirated version of Bordelands 3 to get out there.īecause of this and other incidents, support for Denuvo is dwindling among developers….and it shouldn’t surprise you that Gearbox just yanked the program from Borderlands 3. This program has gained notoriety among PC gamers for making some games run worse due to its its mere presence, and for also miserably failing at the one task it was meant for (preventing piracy). The PC version of Borderlands 3 was released in 2019 with the burden of Denuvo DRM protection. Denuvo….what is it good for? Absolutely nothing, but will you notice its absence?
