Throughout the game industry's short history, there's been ample debate about how much piracy actually impacts a game's legitimate sales. On one side, some publishers try to argue that every single pirated download should count as a "lost sale" that they would have logged in a theoretical piracy-free world. On the other side, some wiseacres argue that most pirates would never consider paying for a legitimate version of the game in the first place or that piracy can actually be useful as a word-of-mouth promotional tool.
While the true effect of piracy on sales revenue is likely somewhere between those two extremes, piracy's precise financial impact on a game has always been hard to nail down. Now, though, a recently published study uses post-release cracks of Denuvo's DRM protections as a sort of natural experiment on games sales in pre- and post-piracy worlds. The results "imply an average proportionate loss of revenue of around 19 percent in each week of release if a crack is available," according to the study, suggesting that effective DRM can actually have a significant impact on a publisher's bottom line.
The data dance
In "The Revenue Effects of Denuvo Digital Rights Management on PC Video Games," published in the peer-reviewed journal Entertainment Computing, UNC research associate William Volckmann examines 86 different Denuvo-protected games initially released on Steam between September 2014 and the end of 2022. That sample includes many games where Denuvo protection endured for at least 12 weeks (when new sales tend to drop off to "negligible" amounts for most games) and many others where earlier cracks allowed for widespread piracy at some point.
A majority of Denuvo games studied remained uncracked during the crucial 12-week sales window after release. Credit: Entertainment Computing / William Volckmann
Crucially, the presence and/or specific timing of a crack's availability couldn't be effectively predicted by characteristics like pricing or critical review scores. That makes the existence of a crack "a practically exogenous event" that can be used to effectively segregate a game's revenues in a no-piracy world (i.e., before the Denuvo crack is available) and a piracy-filled world (i.e., after the crack's release). The variable timing of different crack releases also helps the relative analysis, since "revenue is highest close to the release date, and therefore a crack that appears close to the release date has a disproportionately large effect on revenue," Volckmann writes.
Unfortunately, the lack of good publicly available sales data for most games makes it difficult to measure these revenue effects directly. To estimate a Steam game's relative sales decline in each week after release, Volckmann uses a proxy that combines the number of new Steam user reviews and, for single-player narrative games, the game's average active player count. While Volckmann acknowledges that these imperfect estimates represent "the biggest limitation of this study," any estimated biases away from actual sales data seem likely to cancel out across the various games in the sample.
"The no-crack counterfactual"
After applying some complex statistical models to the underlying data, Volckmann finds that, unsurprisingly, relative revenues in the weeks following a crack's release are lower than the baseline expectation for uncracked games in the same time period. These negative effects of a crack on revenues—which are highly statistically significant (p<0.01)—"impl[ies] that the appearance of a crack reduces revenue relative to the no-crack counterfactual," Volckmann writes.
The longer a game's DRM lasts, the fewer new sales are left to be affected by piracy. Credit: Entertainment Computing / William Volckmann
Just how much money a publisher can expect to lose from a Denuvo crack, though, depends heavily on how quickly the game is cracked, Volckmann finds. A Denuvo-protected game cracked in the first week after release can expect to make about 20 percent less revenue than if the DRM had remained in place, according to the study, while a crack six weeks after a game's release only costs an estimated 5 percent of theoretical total revenue. After 12 weeks, new sales are so negligible that "developers could eventually remove unpopular DRM schemes with minimal losses (and possible gains from strongly DRM-averse consumers)," Volckmann suggests (and some publishers have done just that after Denuvo is no longer effectively protecting new sales).
Volckmann's data lines up with public statements that Denuvo-maker Irdeto has made regarding the need for DRM to protect a game's crucial post-launch window. "We don't position Denuvo Anti Tamper as being uncrackable—no anti piracy solution is," Denuvo VP of Sales Robert Hernandez told Ars in 2017. "However, our goal is to keep each title safe from piracy during the crucial initial sales window when most of the sales are made."
The difference between a week 1 Denuvo crack and a week 6 crack can be significant amounts of revenue. Credit: Entertainment Computing / William Volckmann
Overall, according to Volckmann's data, Denuvo is doing just that. The median Denuvo-protected games lose almost no sales to piracy, Volckmann suggests, because the protection "more often than not" goes uncracked in that initial 12-week window. In a world with no DRM, on the other hand, Volckmann projects those games could expect 20 percent less revenue at the median.
Whatever you think of DRM schemes like Denuvo, the potential to protect against that kind of revenue hit is something that major publishers might find hard to ignore. And there are signs that Denuvo's protection is becoming more crack-resistant in recent months; the CrackWatch subreddit lists 28 Denuvo-protected games released so far in 2024, 26 of which remain uncracked and two of which were cracked well outside the 12-week release window. As we see in this study, that kind of robust protection can be worth a significant amount to a piracy-wary game publisher.
Hey, here's a radical idea: make good games again and people will buy them again. Continue making shit and people will continue to not buy it.
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Still not paying for software LOL i already paid for my pc stop trying to get me to pay more
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I only buy skins and lootboxes
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lol
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It's technically just a number.
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I stole my PC too
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Thats just the cost of doing business with digital media and should be factored in from the start
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Surely Denuvo doesn't have an incentive to inflate the numbers to make their product look better?
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Why give 20% revenue to pirates when you can give it to Denuvo?
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gold!?
!slots 1000
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This is so obviously NOT actually based on real data lmao
"We decided that future sales drop 20% so we made a chart showing that as evidence that our claim is true."
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I have no idea if they legitimately studied the question, but I could construct an observational study that compares different games' sales rates week by week against when a crack was known to go out.
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Maybe. But the only chart with actual data that they showed was about how long it took for games to be cracked. Which is interesting in its own right, I suppose, but has literally nothing to say about revenue.
With the fact that they (a) don't show any charts in any way related to the sales data they're using to underlie their whole analysis and (b) don't actually describe what the analysis was ("some complex statistical models"), I'm going to guess "it's completely made up nonsense".
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Everyone who uses statistics lies. Everyone else only uses raw data.
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The only time i think it would significantly affect sales is a singleplayer game getting cracked before the official release.
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piratestrags can read an entire article refuting their opportunist cope and still post this.
Pay for your products or we're sending you back
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Reminder: rightoids are low IQ BIPOCs and pirate chads are hyper intelligent aristocrats
(yes, germany has an entire political party dedicated to piracy)
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It's the logical conclusion to slave morality. Unironically you need a high IQ to reach a position that is that wrong
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Smart people are stupid
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hey now, Moon's going back to prison not Israel
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He went to prison for trying to infultrate a terrorist organization, just for the sake of journ*lism. If he did that in the 80's he would be aquited and seen as a hero
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Yet too poor to afford to buy products
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To be fair anti-piracy software can throttle performance, which is kind of shitty for the users, especially if they can't afford a giga-computer
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This is why I can't play star field on my MacBook
@Transgender_spez
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Yeah I think companies should have to legally state the games has performance affecting piracy measures before you can buy it on steam but I know major publishers would lobby against it lol
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Just refund if it runs badly
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Just steal it, problem solved.
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If u pirate it it wont have drm cuz crack so it'll run well, if you buy it its way more likely that you'll have to potentially stop playing due to performance
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Your real mistake is buying a fruit laptop
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Theres like 3 incidents of that happening.
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And that doesn't make it any more acceptable lmao
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it's really stupid i need to reward the creator before i actually can judge the creation.
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Don you reward the cashier when you eat your McDonalds?
@Transgender_spez
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i usually tip a few percent yes?
the difference is physical goods necessarily require someones time/labor to produce, and more importantly: once consumed it it's gone. or at least diminished in value thru use.
once designed, digital goods can be copied for free, and do not diminish in value by use.
kinda r-slurred our economic system doesn't take advantage of this to it's fullest extent, but digital goods are fairly new so i suppose that's understandable.
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Frick yourself zoomer.
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*millennial
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You're both r-slurred BIPOCs.
Nobody pays because of some gay butt shit like altruism. You pay because the other side does a hissy fit if you don't and for no other reason.
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if we move to a donation based model then people will be forced to learn to pay voluntarily in order to maintain their consoomtion.
i mean people gunna consoom either way, i'd rather them actually be motivated to pay voluntarily instead of just chasing fomo shit.
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We do with movies. But that's a much shorter, and currently cheaper, experience. They also require no hardware buy-in.
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The reddit cope that "the optimal price of all games is $0 and devs should just be paid by billionaire philanthropist CEOs and exposure and anything else represents greed and price-gouging" is extremely tiresome.
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Oh well, it's peer reviewed- that must mean it's true. How y' gonna argue with this buddy? It's peer reviewed!
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Half the people who bought the new FF7 remakes probably pirated the original lmao
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imo i think we should move to a donation based model. why should consumers be forced to gamble on an experience they haven't played yet?
doing so would lead to a huge shakeup initially... but once we normalized to it, i think we get far higher quality production overall. shit fomo-based content production wouldn't cut it.
and it's not like entertainment is an essential industry, i kinda dgaf is huge sections of it just got deleted.
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Thats called itch.io "pay what you want model" where you can get a game for free and then offer to pay the dev as much as you think its worth
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no i think we should simply remove legal copyright protection for digital goods. that's not the same as testing a small platform in a larger system.
if people want to voluntarily pay upfront, that's their prerogative, but i don't think we should be using the law to force them to do so.
i would support going one step further legally: i want authorship declarations to be protected, and getting such requires freely distributing ur work digitally.
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thats called kickstarter lmao
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Kickstarter is the literal opposite lmao
This is why the dinos didn't make it.
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It's exactly what he stated. Never said when in the production or release period donations would be expected
!r-slurs grab ya boy
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i literally said:
implying i'm against paying before actually having the experience??
kickstater only grants u access to the game if u not only pay before u play, but before it's even built... it's only called a donation because u might never ever get to play, but ur still paying before u play.
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It's not a gamble though?
You can always be assured you're being scammed.
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ever if star citizen never becomes a real game, my $60 og bet has paid out in well over a decade of both seethe and sneed
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!g*mers
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It was called shareware back in the day, where you'd get to try before you buy. It's the opposite of that now, especially with things like season passes.
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errr no? kickstarter is pay before game is even built.
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You never stated when donations would be accepted
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how does he control for higher profile, mass-market games more likely having drm?
sci-hub doesn't have this paper. :/
god, why the frick do i need to read some fricking journos take on this instead of the article directly??? science publishing is so stupid.
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Why didn't they make bibles available in languages other than latin?
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Snapshots:
https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2024/10/the-true-cost-of-game-piracy-20-percent-of-revenue-according-to-a-new-study/:
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try to argue:
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be useful:
ghostarchive.org
archive.org
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word-of-mouth promotional tool:
ghostarchive.org
archive.org
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post-release cracks:
ghostarchive.org
archive.org
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Denuvo's DRM protections:
ghostarchive.org
archive.org
archive.ph (click to archive)
"The Revenue Effects of Denuvo Digital Rights Management on PC Video Games,":
ghostarchive.org
archive.org
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Entertainment Computing:
ghostarchive.org
archive.org
archive.ph (click to archive)
William Volckmann:
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lack of good publicly available sales data:
ghostarchive.org
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have done just that:
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told Ars in 2017:
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lists 28 Denuvo-protected games released so far in 2024:
undelete.pullpush.io
ghostarchive.org
archive.org
archive.ph (click to archive)
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GabeN-word might be an overrated reddit Jesus ala Keanu and Big Chungus but he's right that piracy is purely a service issue
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It's because of pirateBIPOCs that he's effectively got a monopoly, he's been skimming off the top of sales for years.
Somehow the types that will suck off consumer rights will just accept one company dominating the market. And they're delusional about steam too, Valve isn't some happy go lucky hacker company operating out of someone's basement like people make out, it's one of the most profitable corporations in the world.
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Yes because it doesn't actively try to frick them, unlike most monopolies. As soon as GabeN dies and steam passes to either MBA BIPOCS or ideologically driven r-slurs, you'll see a huge fracturing of the market.
Yes, I hope companies providing good service make a profit.
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PC games would be cheaper with more competition and it's a monopoly driven by the existence of piracy. The only reason to package shit into a service is to give un-piratable incentives to buy. And because people don't want to have a gorrilion accounts everywhere, everyone piles into a single monopoly. Just see the crybabies g*mers have when any game dares not have a steam based client. But as I said, those billions in profit steam makes comes from their percent of sales, they're skimming off the top, paying consumers and companies lose money proportional to what steam gains.
The reason Gabe sucks off pirates and defends them is because they are the entire reason he made money off steam in the first place. G*mers then soyface and praise based Gabey as if he's totally unbiased on the issue.
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Just take advantage of regional pricing, there's an entire cottage industry of shady Russians who provide this service. Publishers would rather some money than no money and it allows them to provide, de-facto tiered pricing, without breaking any laws.
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Worthless study
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wiseacre. they really fricking said wiseacre to handwave an actually legitimate point about game piracy.
i couldn't read on after that.
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Es ist mir egal. Gestern habe ich Red Dead Redemption piratiert, um es meinem jüngeren Bruder zu geben.
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meh, one way or another Denuvo will get cracked
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