Denuvo is an outdated DRM, which is no longer even necessary to crack, it simply uses a keygen, which prevents Denuvo himself from detecting that it is really a pirated copy.
The anti-piracy system, Denuvo, is a problem as it is the only solution to prevent games from being pirated, but this DRM has already reached the end. This anti-piracy solution has not had a long life and is the only option for developers, if they do not want to see how their title is uploaded on the net in just a few hours. Denuvo was proposed as a temporary solution, since the DRM developers themselves recognized that it was not a solution against piracy, but to prevent a game from being pirated in the short and medium term.
The developers specify that it is 'a product to offer the widest possible window between the launch and the pirated publication of the same title.' The problem is that over time and despite the updates, the DRM has had a smaller and smaller window in which it has not been possible to hack and now in just a few hours the hackers manage to crack the game. The last few games Denuvo has joined have barely lasted a day without being hacked.
Assassin's Creed: Origins has been a clear example of the problem since Ubisoft has been forced to include a new protection system, called VMProtect, which goes above Denuvo, to prevent it from being hacked in a while. Hackers, to finish off the bizarre story, have said that they no longer even have to crack the DRM, in which they simply use software that generates keys or keygen, which allows access without Denuvo itself detecting that it is an illegal copy .
“Games protected with Denuvo are going to continue to be compromised faster and faster. Hacker groups have found a new way to get through the program's encryption, using 'keygen' software and gaining access in less than a day. The death of DRM is getting closer and closer ”.
