PARTS-QUICK Brand 2GB Memory for DFI BL600-DR Motherboard DDR2 PC2-6400 800MHz DIMM Non-ECC RAM Upgrade, Secure Digital High Capacity 16 GB G GIG 16G 16GIG SD HC 16GB SDHC High Speed Class 6 Memory Card for Casio EXILIM EX-Z150SR Digital Camera Free Card Reader, Akozon Tripod for Laser Level 360 Degree Standard Adjustable Rotation Tripod Stand Bracket 5/8 Thread, Addon 10M Juniper Compat Fanout Cable. Their ship to wreck in my opinion.Renewed Intel Pentium MMX 200Mhz 66FSB CPU Processor SL27J Socket 7 FV80503200 But this is their road they all wanted to go down, so plenty of things for them to learn all along the way. This title is 2020 is chip is 2021 so for a year difference to break a DRM is a bit extreme, but I mean shit, it's not unheard of.īut with all the recent TPM 2 and newer schemes of DRM trying to stay ahead of those who pirate games, yeah this is going to happen and it happening as titles age will become a way more common thing. Now the Assassin's Creed: Valhalla is a bit of a more extreme case of this. There's never been a DRM scheme that's been a rock star on a long term basis. I'm pretty sure everyone can guess where I am on the topic, but that's not important. I'm not getting into a debate on if we need DRM or not. Hence the reason why people say that EOL patches should include a removal of the DRM or "even better" stop using DRM protections altogether.
As games age, any hacky DRM eventually gets in the way of playing the software on newer machines. Yeah all DRM software requires hacky checks at the end of the day, unless the hardware itself has some manner to enforce DRM (which that touches on the most recent chips). The errors occur because Denuvo's DRM software will mistakenly So owners can also solve the issue by updating their PCs to Windows 11 or using the Scroll Lock workaround if available." "he remaining 29 titles will suffer incompatibility problems, but only when run on Windows 10.
"According to Intel, 22 of the games won't work on Alder Lake under both Windows 10 and Windows 11," adds PCMag. But it'll do so by placing the efficiency cores on standby. In the meantime, the company says it has come up with a workaround that can run any of the affected games on Alder Lake.
Intel says it is working with game developers to roll out a software fix, although the company notes that some of the affected DRM-protected titles can run fine, so long as your PC is on Windows 11. It spans 51 games, including For Honor, Mortal Kombat 11, Star Wars Jedi Fallen Order, and Shadow of the Tomb Raider, as well as the Assassin's Creed: Valhalla game we observed the issue on. But on Thursday, the company published a list of every PC title known to it that has incompatibility issues with Alder Lake. Whether these would be marginal titles or blockbusters we did not know, as hundreds of games use the Denuvo DRM scheme. Intel was originally mum on which specific games were affected, making it unclear the scale of the problem the company cited "32" in pre-release briefings to the tech press. (This P-core/E-core design is a new trait of Intel's chips with Alder Lake.) The errors occur because Denuvo's DRM software will mistakenly think the so-called "Performance-cores" and "Efficiency-cores" (P-cores and E-cores) on the chip belong to two separate PCs, when in reality the two types of processing cores are running on the same Alder Lake processor. The game would crash halfway through the test run, or simply not boot in at all.
This was confirmed in our review of the Core i9-12900K when we tried to run the hit AAA Ubisoft title Assassin's Creed: Valhalla, part of our processor benchmark suite. An anonymous reader quotes a report from PCMag: Intel has posted a release that the hybrid CPU core architecture on Alder Lake can be incompatible with certain games, specifically some protected by the anti-piracy DRM software from Denuvo.