Hypervisor Denuvo Crack - Saving so much money

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HansKlokBier

Kingly stout since 1809
kiwifarms.net
Joined
Sep 29, 2024
Hey guys,

Denuvo is cracked and it is glorious.

What are ur opinions on the Hypervisor method?

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Saving myself 160 euros.
 
I don't know if I would trust installing an unknown, shady driver just to play a game. If I was a Denuvo dev I wouldn't care much about this bypass due to how intrusive and risky it is. So it's either pay a ridiculous price or give the keys to your PC to some faceless guy online. Unless I'm wrong and it's fully open source, carefully inspected by someone trustworthy and confirmed to be 100% safe.
 
I use a second Windows drive exclusively for a Hypervisor crack with Internet disable, ethernet device disabled, and all other drives in Disk Management set to Offline (inaccessible, not anything internet related).
This sounds nice but it's so annoying to reboot just to play a game and do nothing else I'll probably never download another one of these.

Until someone ships some kind of super-virus in a hypervisor crack no one can really say just how much more dangerous these are compared to a normal crack.
 
When I saw what was needed to run the Hypervisor crack I literally laughed and just deleted the download (I didn't seed btw). There isn't a snowball's chance in hell that Crimson Desert is worth paying for either. Anti piracy measures haven't increased sales. I simply won't play Crimson Desert. Nothing more to it.
 
its good that its cracked but the downside is i dont wanna jump back and forth to windows. also the AAA games are hundreds of GB which makes me not wanna download them.
 
Anyone who is willing to risk their computer to play modern games is gay and retarded. Every single modern triple A video-game to come out is dogshit and absolutely not worth my computer's security.
 
Personally I feel like the risks of this kind of crack are overstated, but I also think the risks of piracy in general are vastly understated.

Frankly, if you're using your computer for real work, or if you have anything remotely sensitive on them, you probably shouldn't be running cracked software in general, because the simple truth is you are ultimately giving a *lot* of trust to whatever executable you're running not to do anything nasty, and if it did do anything nasty, by the time you've noticed it'd almost certainly be too late (i.e. if it's an infostealer or similar).

At the same time, whilst I don't plan on using these cracks, I'm genuinely glad they exist, just because I frankly cannot stand the idea of a DRM that I can't, in some way, bypass.
 
Hypervisor is like leaving your front door wide open while you sleep at night. It's probably just fine and nobody breaks in and murders you, but do you really want to take that risk?
It doesn't even fix the performance loss from Denuvo since Denuvo still runs normally and Hypervisor just spoofs the responses Denuvo wants.
 
It's also not strictly about using it yourself - but the simple fact that it exists creates a vulnerability that can be endlessly exploited that hurts Denuvo's bottom line as it's no longer "bulletproof" protection.

Games in the future may hear of the vulnerability and skip using Denuvo in the future and now that the exploit is public - the crackers can work on better and better versions of it.
 
Everyone who uses these kinds of cracks is an absolute moron.
Denuvo is an Austria-based "digital rights management" company owned by Irdeto, a South African spyware company. Their DRM involves a 5-machine limit activation on games, and constant CPU activity from god knows what, that worsens game performance. I guess everyone who doesn't want their CPU raped by constant DRM checks is a moron? Fuck you, faggot.
disregard this i suck cocks
 
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It's also not strictly about using it yourself - but the simple fact that it exists creates a vulnerability that can be endlessly exploited that hurts Denuvo's bottom line as it's no longer "bulletproof" protection.

Games in the future may hear of the vulnerability and skip using Denuvo in the future and now that the exploit is public - the crackers can work on better and better versions of it.
This is a good point. Denuvo has already made statements that they are working on solutions so they must be aware how it could hurt their bottom line. If zero day cracks become more common it will definitely make publishers think twice if buying expensive Denuvo license is worth it.

Denuvo is an Austrian spyware and "digital rights management" company. I guess everyone who doesn't want their CPU raped by constant DRM checks is a moron? Fuck you, faggot.
Hypervisor does nothing to stop Denuvo from "raping your CPU". Devuno runs just like it does without any cracks. All Hypervisor does is intercept requests Denuvo sends to server and spoofs the answer to trick Denuvo to think that the game is a legit copy.
 
Hypervisor does nothing to stop Denuvo from "raping your CPU". Devuno runs just like it does without any cracks. All Hypervisor does is intercept requests Denuvo sends to server and spoofs the answer to trick Denuvo to think that the game is a legit copy.
oh alright, didn't know that. thanks. Kinda odd crackers didn't figure that out from the get-go...
 
Gotta refute the above, as this runs a bit deeper: Hypervisor is a kernel-level exploit, you need to give it completely unchecked access to your machine for it to work, the kind that not even reinstalling your OS can fix:


Maybe not the best call to risk a $2000 PC in order to save the purchase price of a $60 game.

Kinda odd crackers didn't figure that out from the get-go...
This is because it's more complicated than that. If something seems conspicuously simple in a way that makes everyone seem retarded, odds are good that it is and the situation is actually more complex than it seems.
 
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