Have always been curious how much companies pay to use/license Denuvo. Seems like every AAA title launched typically sees it broken within a week of launch. If they hedge their bets primarily on console these days, seems odd that it'd be worth the time, money, and effort.
I often wonder if any of these companies do any sort of customer surveying to gauge these kinds of decisions before bull-dozering forward on the idea - i.e. only online play, etc; but then I remind myself that they'll probably just use it to leverage paid DLC. I mean, I don't mind multi-player...
I'd be happy if I simply didn't have to connect to BNet services to play single player or host a game with friends. Pepperidge Farms knows what I'm talking about.
Definitely a little up the list in terms of difficulty; don't think I've cussed as much at a game since Ori, but I still keep coming back. Amazing graphics. Well worth the $20.
It's a shame that it even happened in the first place, but at least they actually listened and addressed the issue vs just swimming around in piles of money yelling "Lol, whatevs".
You better believe they could have just handed it over to the NSA to probably do the same thing this 3rd Party Israeli firm did. They were just wanting to try and set a legal precedent to make it a revolving door going forward.
Pretty much this - went thru the same nightmare with them. Used to use an HDHomeRun to still tune in local stations, until they got approval to encrypt even local broadcasts :(
Using part of a cereal box as a mouse pad makes the list? These folks have obviously never had to go inside another person's house to provide tech support.
Looking to buy a GTX 760 w/ 4GB. Would prefer an EVGA model (OC / FTW / etc.) to match looks of my existing card but might consider other brand if the price is right.
Hit me up with asking price (including shipping to 66030) and your heat. I can make payment via non-CC Paypal.
My Heat...
First job out of college was as a PC Tech for a local computer company. Our custom built machines with generic motherboards always seemed to come back with wierd, random issues (random lock-ups, etc.). One day I ended up building a system with a ASUS P3V133 board and was amazed at the...
Sure, because that makes so much financial sense. "Let's shell out $2 billion dollars and then lock out 2/3 of the market!". Granted if Ballmer was still at the helm, I'd probably be right there with 'ya.
Newest rumors are also that Notch is the one who approached Microsoft after their dealings...
I like that they offer up a give-away just in time for Christmas - that and they make some rather nice looking non-reference cooling designs for their cards.