Ubisoft's DRM No Longer Requires Constant Internet Access on Some Titles
by Brian Leahy, Jan 04, 2011 4:00pm PSTUbisoft has confirmed to Shacknews that the always-on DRM in a few of its PC titles has been patched out, including Assassin's Creed II and Splinter Cell: Conviction. The Ubisoft representative reminded us that this was done on a case-by-case basis and that from the beginning the company had said it might patch the DRM out at some point.
New games, however, may still ship with the always-on DRM, Ubisoft confirmed to Shacknews.
Users on Reddit are reporting that the PC versions of Assassin's Creed II and Splinter Cell: Conviction, previously infected with Ubisoft's always-on DRM, no longer require a constant connection to the Internet to be played (via PC Gamer)
Now, the games will supposedly only check legitimacy over the Internet every time the game is launched, but can then be played offline. It's not quite hassle free, but it's certainly better than having to maintain a constant connection or suffer an interruption in gameplay, especially in singleplayer campaigns.
Report: Frostbite 3 games to be 'optimized exclusively' for AMD cards
Candy Crush dev exploring IPO
Castle of Illusion preview: more than a repaint
Steel Diver sequel is Nintendo's first free-to-play game
Why Pikmin hasn't made the jump to handheld






Comments
2 of the biggest games of the last 2 years, Mass Effect 2 and Dragon Age, had NO DRM. Yet they sold perfectly well. These are isolated examples but there are dozens more out there. Ubisoft should take a lesson from them.
Intrusive DRM is bad news. Full stop.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 10 replies.
Or, they would be Microsoft (GFWL) or Ubisoft (UPlay).
You must be logged in to post.