A good reason to buy PS4?Saoe said:What if new Xbox will end up having always online DRM?
And if they both do, I guess it'll be difficult for people, but the best answer is probably "PC".
A good reason to buy PS4?Saoe said:What if new Xbox will end up having always online DRM?
That's true of all content on the Live store -- it only works offline on the console it was purchased on, and if you sign in on a different console then you need to stay online to play it.Calrabjohns said:You cannot play TML (The Missing Link) without being connected to their servers because...muffins.
...
I've only played ten minutes of that DLC, which I bought on the first day at a friend's house like an idiot. Along with so many XBLA games that I can't use or work erratically when not connected.
Oh, I'm sorry to hear thatCalrabjohns said:I utilized his connection to buy it. It was still my console I used/>
No playing TML, Penny Arcade 3 or something like twenty percent of my XBLA titles. Last time I could connect on my own was Dec. of 2012. In that time, I've learned that PS3 connects better (for me) at around 85% of the time to a charitable less than 2% for 360.
You never know, MS is over confident just like Sony was before they released PS3. I sold my 360 long back since I never used media apps, I rarely play online, mainly story games like Witcher. PS4 in on my wish list.. PSN+ is getting pretty good these days they are giving away free AAA games. Lets wait for E3.Csszr said:I still can't see Microsoft going always online. I've been wondering if this has been a marketing ploy. We'll see, if has to be online I'll stick with PC and maybe side with Sony, console wise.
People with a brain will not buy it?... I know I'm naive now.Saoe said:What if new Xbox will end up having always online DRM?
This is why I stopped buying Football Manager. Bought every single version from about CM97/98 to FM2010. From FM11 it was no longer an option to play with the disk in the drive and therefore get away from Shite. Now it was Shite-exclusive. So I stopped buying it.Glaroug said:Its drove me into a green rage when I learned I had to go though Steam every time I loaded up Skyrim, even though I bought the disk copy.
Exactly. If we as a community of gamers said no to all these various DRM schemes and refused to buy such titles - DRM would not exist, at least not to the massive degree it does today. But gamers don't really give a fuck about such matters. It's like a dealer going round with heroine. Strings attached? Fuck that. I WANT IT!!!!11Vinterberg said:As long as people throw money at everybody who flashes a shiny object in front of them, we'll have no say in this at all as anti-DRM consumers.
And seriously, D3 and Simcity sold much more than the big fat zero they should have - but our world is not dominated by wellinformed and careful-minded people.
Thus, DRM will not disappear in any near future, if anything it will get even more "out there".
I agree - Windows by design includes DRM in itself. I.e. you can't have Windows without DRM. But most people simply don't realize it, since MS naturally doesn't inform them about it on every corner. If someone wants to be DRM free - Windows is obviously not an option.Volsung said:You know what else uses highly obtrusive DRM and gamers do not care, and use it regularly? Windows.
Playing DRM free games on Windows is like playing DRM-free games on Steam![]()
Microsoft can go fuck itself.Saoe said:What if new Xbox will end up having always online DRM?