OldFatGuy: It wouldn't be pirating if you own the game. And yes, this is what EVERYBODY should do when DRM gives games THEY OWN a fit.
zeroxxx: The condition is that the original copy you own must match the pirated copy.
Say you own Stardew Valley on Steam. For some weird reason Steam is evil and doesn't let you play the game you legitimately purchased. So then you need to torrent GOG's Stardew Valley which doesn't have DRM and it works.
In that case it's pirating, and it's the least strict definition.
Now for the case at hand, where Topic Creator cannot play his copy of Batman, he needs to go to Warner Bros and sends them the proof of purchase for Steam copy of the game. That's all there is to it.
I've finished all Steam versions of Batman including Arkham Knight and have had no issue. There were crashes but nothing major.
You can say that all you want and it's still nothing but bullshit. Corporate, DRM defending bullshit.
If one owns a game, they are not pirating if they download a crack, a fix, a patch, a whatthefuckever, to get it to run.
With your bullshit definitions, one is breaking the EULA every time they mod it ("The condition is that the original copy you own must match the pirated copy")
What utter nonsense. Nice try though.
Also, not for nothing,
Universal Human Right 17, the right to own things, states:
No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his property.
When a company arbitrarily changes or ends some sort of "client" and the result is one can no longer play what they own then I'd say that violates one's right to ownership. You have any links to back up that bullshit you posted or did you just make it up?
Ownership law is full of examples where owners have a right to make whatever mods, adjustments, etc. are necessary to be able to use their property the way they want and/or it was intended.
As long as every PC, console, etc. retailer insists on using the term BUY instead of rent (which is THEIR CHOICE) for games/software/etc. then they are implying OWNERSHIP, and therefore with ownership comes rights. If, on the other hand, one is RENTING something, obviously such ownership rights don't exist.
But, as I said, Steam, GOG, Amazon, EVERYONE, CHOOSES (they can at any time change it) to call what we're doing as BUYING IT instead of renting it so they imply ownership rights to all of us that do buy.