Crytek: Crysis Patches Prove Abundant Piracy, Consoles Are 'Very Good DRM Technologies'
by Chris Faylor, Aug 28, 2008 1:00pm PDTWhile some argue that piracy can increase game sales by letting players take a "try before you buy" approach, Crytek business manager Harald Seeley isn't one of them.
Based on downloads of the last Crysis patch, he argues, there were "a lot more active [Crysis] players than there were unit sales."
And since those pirates are still playing the game months after release, Seeley reasons that "then they were a sale that didn't happen but probably would have had it not been possible to obtain the game illegally."
Crytek, the studio that created the hardware intensive Far Cry and Crysis games exclusively for PC, has repeatedly stated that the upcoming Crysis Warhead will be its last PC-only game due to the abundant piracy of PC games.
But just because Crytek is no longer developing PC exclusives, that doesn't mean the company will abandon the platform. "We want to continue to provide our fans in the PC world a rich and engaging experience," Seeley explained to EDGE Online.
"But that doesn't mean we can't also release the same title on consoles. It takes nothing away from the PC gamer if the game is also available on another platform."
"Console technology has advanced a great deal since we released Far Cry," he continued. "Our teams have since found it very exciting to push the boundaries of what most people today consider possible to do on those platforms, both technically and artistically."
In addition, Seeley expressed his belief that things will be better on consoles as "consoles themselves are, in one sense, simply very good DRM technologies."
"Consumers welcome and pay for [consoles], in order to receive the benefits that come with them, such as the healthy variety of games which are able to prosper in such a protected environment, and the greater ease of installation, use and reliability."
Xbox One increases friends lists to 1,000
Xbox One allows players to auto-resume games through cloud
Xbox One achievements dynamic, not limited to single games
Xbox One Kinect reading emotions and heart rate
Battlefield 4 launching October 29; confirmed for Xbox One and PS4







Comments
What you don't seem to get is that you're not going to win anyone over this way. Most of us are not in the industry so we're just not going to sympathize with you on the piracy thing as much as you would like. And even if we do, for the gamers who actually bought your game there's nothing we can do about it. I bought Crysis, I did my part, but I can't force others to buy it nor can I make all the pirates get legit and buy a copy. At best you come across as chastising the people who are not in the room, at worst you're preaching to the choir.
Go ahead, do console games. Make cross-platform games. Make a version of the Crytek engine which will run on consoles and max out PC's. Do it because of the piracy concerns. Hell, go ahead and do this even if your games sold on the PC just fine. Just stop telling the PC user community that they're full of pirates. That goes over about as well as telling an ethnic group that their ranks are full of criminals.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 19 replies.
You must be logged in to post.