Saberwolf_Prime: The problem I think is the emphasis on the words "perceive" and "feel". They "feel" that they're losing (a significant amount of) sales because piracy exists, however they don't know for a fact how significant it actually is or what it will be. Witcher 3 didn't need Denuvo and it still did great. Yes pirates will pirate, but fans will buy, so logically protecting initial sales via DRM is not entirely sound.
The best thing consumers can do is insist on DRM-free. Don't buy a DRM'd game in the hopes it will get removed later, DON'T pirate, (and for goodness sake don't buy & pirate!).
I certainly agree with this. :)
My full intention was to wait till it actually arrives here before purchasing it (if I do), and not before that.
More on the topic, I have no idea what's wrong with the publisher. Microids is the same company who published
Yesterday origins, a game that arrived with Denuvo packed in. And now, this huge mess of a beloved franchise. You know, there isn't even the ability to manually save!
(I personally hate check-point saving) And, as many others have eloquently laid out in the thread, the game is rife with bugs galore, lousy controls and camera, lip syncing issues..etc.. It's like, what were they doing for the last five years? Just dreaming up the best copy protection they could slap on it?
They should take a cue from
Dreamfall Chapters, which was published DRM-Free. I don't see the company going bankrupt from doing so, and the game received quite a fair bit of attention and promotion (GOG had the title up as a giveaway during one of the summer sales for those who purchased a set minimum cost of games).