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famousringo said:
steven787 said:
mrstickball said:
steven, he's talking about the PC version, not the console version. PC owners got screwed beyond belief with the flaws of the Bioshock version. The X360 version IS the definitive Bioshock, not PC.

I knew he was talking about the PC version. The PC version isn't really flawed. "Oh no.... What do you mean I can't put it on my three computers at home, and all my friends computers."

When you buy a piece of PC software you are aware of how many machines the the software is licensed for. How is this a flaw that they finally have the tech to prevent THIEVES from STEALING what they work for?

All the other bugs (which are minor) will get patched. And hackers will make them a crack real soon anyway. Another reason why developers are getting away from Windows games by supporting Macs and Consoles.

I am a console gamer anyway, so I would buy the 360 version, but not for those reasons. :) I don't own a 360 anymore though. :(

EDIT: That really sounded like a fanboy rant. I didn't mean it that way. I am just against piracy. Piracy = Bad, Homebrews and improvements = good.


First, the tech doesn't do a damn thing to stop piracy. Pirate versions are still available, and don't come with all the flaws and restrictions that legal buyers have to go through. You should be getting more for being a legal buyer (physical media, a sense of contribution, official support), not less (demeaning computer privacy violations and unreasonable installation restrictions).

Second, let me paint you a scenario whereby the two installation limit (not two machine, two installation) is an incredible pain the ass for legal buyers.

You pick up Bioshock and go to install it on your computer. You find that your old PC hardware doesn't do a very good job of running the game, so you use it as an excuse to buy a new machine. You install Bioshock on your new rig and have a blast playing it for about a month.

A month later, some calamity befalls your computer. Power surge, malware, glitch, whatever, the fact is, you need to reformat your hard drive.

You finally get your new gaming rig back up and running, and go to re-install Bioshock. Whoops, sorry, you've already had your two installations. You now have to contact the publisher and assure them that you're not a scummy pirate by jumping through whatever hoops they demand of you (one game reviewer had to send photos of his installer media to prove he had a legal copy).

Or, you could avoid all of that, and get the pirate version. No suspicious rootkits, no install limits, no defective by design customer experience. Ironically, if you do the right thing, they treat you like a criminal. Do the criminal thing and they treat you right.

Anybody know how many copies Oblivion sold on the PC? It had no copy protection whatsoever and that didn't seem to slow its success at all.


It's for piracy, that long winded excuse you just typed up is unrealistic.  How often is the average gamer going to need to format?  They stilll give him new rights, which they don't have to.  I already said there'd be cracks.  

How is stealing doing the right thing, ever?  You don't like the product, don't buy it. 



I would cite regulation, but I know you will simply ignore it.