Neoseeker : News : Bioware cedes to community and weakens Mass Effect's DRM
Hardware Newsletter:
Email:

Latest News
Fri, May 16
Thu, May 15
Wed, May 14
Tue, May 13

send article hardware newsletter   article comments (8)

Bioware cedes to community and weakens Mass Effect's DRM
Kevin Spiess - Friday, May 9th, 2008 | 2:27PM (PST)


No more 10-day online activations required

Bioware cedes to community and weakens Mass Effect's DRM Image 1

Showing respect for the gaming community, Bioware has taken feedback to heart and has decided to scale back their DRM somewhat.

A few days ago it was announced that Bioware would be requiring users to re-activate PC copies of Mass Effect, every 10 days. In that situation, if you lost your internet connection, you'd be stuck with a nice shiny DVD to play frisbee with, instead of being able to play the game.

Here is an excerpt from a lengthy post on the Bioware forums, where community manager Jay Watamaniuk related the following:

"There has been a lot of discussion in the past few days on how the security requirements for Mass Effect for PC will work. BioWare, a division of EA, wants to let fans know that Mass Effect will not require 10- day periodic re-authentication.

BioWare has always listened very closely to its fans and we made this decision to ensure we are delivering the best possible experience to them. To all the fans including our many friends in the armed services and internationally who expressed concerns that they would not be able re-authenticate as often as required, EA and BioWare want you to know that your feedback is important to us.

The solution being implemented for Mass Effect for the PC changes copy protection from being key disc based, which requires authentication every time you play the game by requiring a disc in the drive, to a one time online authentication.

This system has an added benefit of allowing players to seamlessly play the game without needing the DVD in the drive.

Key points---

•This solution allows gamers to authenticate their game on three different computers with the purchase of one disc. EA Customer Service is on hand to supply any additional authorizations that are warranted. This will be done on a case-by-case basis by contacting customer support.

• Games are authorized to the machine when the player installs and launches the software for the first time.

• We’ve all had those times when the discs get lost or scratched and you can’t play a game you’ve bought because you need a working disc in the drive. With the new system players will no longer need the disc to play the game, but can instead simply retain the disc as back up for re-installation.

FAQ---

Q: What is the difference between the old PC disc authentication solution and the new online model?

A: Two things have changed:

• First, authentication of discs has now gone from the physical format to the online format, freeing the need for consumers to have a disc in the drive at all times.

• Second, with online authentication consumers now connect to the Internet the first time the game is launched and are required only to reconnect if they are downloading new game content.

Q: What happens when I’ve reached the maximum # of computers for my game and I need more, say due to theft of computer, computer crashes, etc?

A: EA customer service is on hand to supply any additional authorizations that are warranted. This will be done on a case-by-case basis by contacting customer support.

Q: Did BioWare and EA change their mind on requiring that the game be re-authorized every 10 days?

A: BioWare has always listened very closely to its fans and we made this decision to ensure we are delivering the best possible experience to them. To all the fans including our many friends in the armed services and internationally who expressed concerns that they would not be able re-authenticate as often as required, EA and BioWare want you to know that your feedback is important to us.

Q: If the game isn’t going to require an authentication every 10 days, will it ever require re-authentication?

A: Only if the player chooses to download new game content."


While some of the more rabid anti-DRM folks are still upset with SecuROM's presence in Mass Effect, many more people applauded Bioware for at least removing the 10-day required activation system.

Update: Looks like the heavy-handed 10-day activation DRM was supposed to find its way into Spore, but now these plans have changed as well. But because there is a such a large online component to Spore, the game will no doubt be authorizing itself using some other methods.

Source: Bioware Forums
Section: PC Games

  Related Stories

  Related Reviews & Articles

back to news    comments or corrections

Comments:

May 9th, 2008 2:33PM(PST)
Bill Gates03

HAHA, I knew that DRM they had planned wouldn't last long.

May 9th, 2008 2:36PM(PST)
OmegaFury

That sounds a bit more reasonable.

May 9th, 2008 7:10PM(PST)
tallteen86

One wonders why the decided to do that 10 day system in the first place....Common sense should tell them that the community would NOT care for it at all....And it is excessive as it is....

The "only re-authenticate when DLing new content" system makes more sense (makes quite a bit of sense actually)....You'd have to be online to DL the content anyhow...

May 10th, 2008 12:12AM(PST)
THM

May God praise 'Bioware'.

May 10th, 2008 6:52AM(PST)
Bombite

I can imagine companies like UbiSoft WOULD have gone through with this, almost.

May 10th, 2008 3:56PM(PST)
OmegaFury

It could be that they id that on purpose. Their plan was probably to look good. "Hey, look, we listen to our fans."

May 11th, 2008 3:49AM(PST)
Euphoric

Finally some sense. Hopefully Spore follows suit soon.

May 11th, 2008 7:20AM(PST)
x_revenge

i doubt they realy "listened to their fans"...perhaps such a system cost too much or was lots of trouble or wtf but no matter, this will make some happy


Submit your comment:
Name *:  Members, please LOGIN before posting
Email:
Comment*:
Live user verification:
* Enter the letters you see in the image (without spaces)

* indicates required fields

  RSS Feeds

Latest Comments
Most Comments
Latest Net Reviews:
Latest Inhouse:


Compare Prices

Motherboards
 Abit
 ASUS
 Gigabyte
 Intel
 iWill
 Shuttle
 Soyo
 Super Micro
 Tyan
 More...

Processors
 AMD
 Intel
 More...

Memory
 SDRAM
 RDRAM
 DDRAM
 More...

Video Cards
 ATI
 Visiontek
 PNY
 3Dfx
 More...

search for lowest prices

(0.0244/mc/venture)