SonicX
Emperor
Yup,Akka said:And if it does, even MORE people will pirate it. Trust me.
StarForce 3 = I'm not buying but downloading
Reasonable protection = Here you got my 50 bucks
Yup,Akka said:And if it does, even MORE people will pirate it. Trust me.
Akka said:If the game has annoying copy protection, though, I'll HAVE to get a crack in addition to the original game
If the protection doesn't require me to constantly put the CD when I want to play, nor install virus-like crap in my computer, then it's not an "annoying protection" and I don't need to get a crack, as I already said.Goombaz said:You might be surprised...
You don't always need a crack. There are catch all gamebooters and such that deal with many forms of copy protection in a generic way.
Also, sometimes a good enough duplicate can be made that it is a non-issue. Not often but it happens.
FireZ said:My main point is, there are several thousands of people that will not pay for the game. There are several thousands that will buy the game just because its Civ 4 and they are supporting the company that brought them this great game. There are also a couple thousand people that will buy that game just due to the fact that they do not want to mess with the copy protection. There are only a few hundred that will not buy the game because they have to be hindered by the cd in the drive.
Civ 4 has a vast community that will only play single player. There are thousands that will only play the single player, thus rendering your "CD Key" methode good for MP but worthless in this situation.
-edit-
I'm just wondering when having a cd in the drive became such a hinderance that people would go out of their way to pirate the game rather than pay for it? CD key...makes sense. Cd required to play, not that big of a deal. I'll just make an image.
Starforce 3 - crap - won't buy it either. Thats just over eccessive.
FireZ said:My main point is, there are several thousands of people that will not pay for the game. There are several thousands that will buy the game just because its Civ 4 and they are supporting the company that brought them this great game. There are also a couple thousand people that will buy that game just due to the fact that they do not want to mess with the copy protection. There are only a few hundred that will not buy the game because they have to be hindered by the cd in the drive.
Civ 4 has a vast community that will only play single player. There are thousands that will only play the single player, thus rendering your "CD Key" methode good for MP but worthless in this situation.
-edit-
I'm just wondering when having a cd in the drive became such a hinderance that people would go out of their way to pirate the game rather than pay for it? CD key...makes sense. Cd required to play, not that big of a deal. I'll just make an image.
Starforce 3 - crap - won't buy it either. Thats just over eccessive.
oldStatesman said:Can you present links to these studies where you got the numbers...or are they just your estimations? I find it hard to believe so many would buy the game to avoid copy protection...besides it being a fallacious argument. (Buy a product with copy protection to avoid copy protection? Huh?)
Again, the problem has been defined by the big businesses runnning the show...and by arguing for extreme copy protection methods you are playing by their rules. But don't forget consumerism is a partnership...open to negotiation by both parties ... and as a consumer we should have a big say in defining the problem and rectifying it.
If companies designed a 21st century marketing system then copy protection would be no big issue. Instead, they are trying to hold onto the old fashioned ways of doing business. Rather than use a stick, they should use a carrot. Provide great web service, free playable demos, on-demand downloads that must be registered online to activiate, and most important great customer service to keep their customers happy after the sale to provide an incentive to buy so as to get that support; frequent and accurate patches of glitches and bugs....if the price includes true full service, that IS an incentive to buy. Obtrusive copy protection is just an incentive to cause hard feelings, and eventually drive a good number of people into looking for solutions, i.e cracks; a lot of whom would never even be aware such a black market existed if their games or software worked as advertised out of the box and they were able to get real support from the distributor.
The argument that not all are always online is also a straw man. Just about everyone who plays a game or uses their pc's in this day have some form of internet access. How hard is it to dial up for a few minutes to go through an online process - one that is permanent, does not require special disks or software that one does not want on their pc...heck, everyone spends time to download fixes....
I do advocate a mild forms of copy protection...ones that work, are not invasive to the user, and require no additional hardware or software. But we consumers MUST let the distributors know, give us a good product and after market support and we will pay for it ....give us crappy methods, poor support and stomp all over us and we will look to other markets instead.
I second. I opened a thread about it more than one year ago. It is crazy that in the era of laptops one has to bring the disk around everywhere. ANd untra-light laptops often have only external CD-driverLeprechaune said:A plea for a different form of Copy Protection.
SonicX said:what country is that ?
joethreeblah said:Have you tried building a couple of courthouses and connecting your outtermost cities to a couple of neighbors?
Herr Doktor said:Maybe a drill platform over the Atlantic?
DiamanteLouco said:I am going to buy Civ IV, but that´s the first game I will be going to buy in years, I don´t know this is valid as an excuse, but, you pay 50 dollars for a game, I pay 150 reais, in the case of the preorder, I will pay 255 reais because of all the taxes both countries have, and yes, I am the only brazilian I know that will actually buy the copy, not only of civilization, but of any game that isn´t a MMORPG. Would you pay 255 dollars for a game?
Not blaming you for the crappy economy in my country, just saying that most of the times I don´t have the choice to buy the game, CIV is worth a little more then a week salary for me and I am actually eating less and going out less so I can buy it, but I am just doing it because I´m a hopless addict, no other game deserves such a blow in my pocket.
(point of this post: Protect all you want, no protection all these years stopped me from downloading a game 2 days after its release, if all, it just annoyed the people who actually bought the thing as for crack sites are more then ready to deal with protection)
Starforce is a nightmare to crack. Just try to download and apply a crack and play Splinter Cell: Choas Theory. Almost impossible, unless you have and external DVD-drive and disconnect all your internal optical drives. It's just insane!Lahdoz said:I just use drive emulation, no disks to swap, no disks to carry around, just a few clicks and the disk is mounted. It's really handy when disks have data that needs to be loaded intermittantly. The old Myst series comes to mind. It is way faster for the data to be loaded off of an emulated disk (hard drive in reality) than off of a CD or DVD. I use Alcohol software.
Starforce upsets the emulation though, so it may be a problem. I'll wait and see what protection it's got, and probably rage if it's Starforce.