Denuvo may have reached the end as every protected PC game is now crackable

Alfonso Maruccia

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The takeaway: The PC piracy scene appears to have reached a milestone many once thought unlikely: Denuvo, long regarded as one of the most formidable DRM and anti-tamper systems in gaming, has effectively been defeated. With hypervisor bypasses emerging as the latest breakthrough, there is now no known PC game protected by Denuvo that cannot be obtained for free through either a crack or a functional bypass.

Released in 2014 to protect FIFA 15 from piracy and circumvention, Denuvo built a reputation as the toughest protection layer in PC gaming. Over the years, various groups and independent developers managed to break the technology on a case-by-case basis, producing cracked versions of individual games. That long-running contest now appears to have reached a turning point, with Denuvo reportedly removed or bypassed in every PC title previously known to use Irdeto's protection.

As noted recently by game "repacker" FitGirl, Denuvo can now be considered a "fully useless" anti-piracy measure. Reaching that point took contributions from many coders over the years, with the DenuvOwO team and Voices38 emerging as the latest names in a long line of Denuvo-focused crackers.

For much of the past decade, Denuvo established itself as the dominant protection technology in the PC market. Its anti-tamper and, more recently, anti-cheat tools helped the Austrian firm secure deals with major game publishers, while some indie studios adopted the technology as well despite what was likely a meaningful financial burden.

The tide began to turn when developers found a way to bypass Denuvo's checks embedded in game code rather than remove the protection outright. Using unsigned hypervisor drivers, the DenuvOwO team spent recent months pushing more Denuvo-protected games into the piracy scene. The method effectively deceives Denuvo into believing it is still running on a legitimate copy.

The hypervisor bypass has become a significant development in the PC piracy scene. Thanks to DenuvOwO, even recent releases such as Crimson Desert and Resident Evil Requiem have now been brought into circulation.

At the same time, Voices38 is reportedly the only known developer still focused on fully removing Denuvo code from newer releases, including Doom: The Dark Ages and and the aforementioned Resident Evil Requiem.

The creators of the hypervisor method have clearly struck a critical point in Denuvo's innermost design. Irdeto developers have recently acknowledged they are working on countermeasures, but the "official" list maintained by the CrackWatch subreddit suggests there are currently no Denuvo-protected PC games left that cannot be cracked or bypassed in some form.

At this point, any subsequent DRM update from Irdeto may arrive too late to meaningfully reverse the situation. There is still a smaller group of VR-focused titles that lack what the scene would consider a proper Denuvo-free release, but even those may not remain exceptions for long. DenuvOwO is reportedly seeking working copies of those games as it attempts to eliminate the remaining holdouts and bring the anti-tamper system to a final defeat.

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Civilization VII is still uncracked on Windows… believe it was released over a year ago now… too bad Civ V is still the best in the franchise…

I purchased Civ V ages ago - but the Steam version breaks after playing - have to verify game files every time… ironically, the pirated version plays flawlessly…
 
And I hope this news is broadcasted loud enough that the executives who make such dumb decisions decide that it's not worth the money to pay for Denuvo anymore.

Too bad such a decision won't end up being because they are pro-consumer, but I'll still take the win; to not get punished for buying a game.
 
It's interesting, but I wonder if Irdeto will be able to patch it in a way that at least takes a few months to crack again, or they'll enter the loop of defeat of releasing updated versions of Denuvo that will be cracked again in a few days or couple of weeks.

I can't help but admire both sides of the coin as achievements, a company that made a solution that resisted crackers for 12 years, and the crackers for finally defeating it. It's a very cool story in retrospect.
 
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I'm not even going to read this slop but just state what all the morons who think that Denuvo isn't worth it keep incorrectly thinking, and that is Denuvo is only meant to protect games from piracy for the first week or so, and that is it. After that sales for most games plummet, and so piracy is a non-issue, so if a game can make it through even the first 24-48hrs, that is already golden territory, as most people will purchase a game either before or within the first couple days to up to a week after release.
 
I'm not even going to read this slop but just state what all the morons who think that Denuvo isn't worth it keep incorrectly thinking, and that is Denuvo is only meant to protect games from piracy for the first week or so, and that is it. After that sales for most games plummet, and so piracy is a non-issue, so if a game can make it through even the first 24-48hrs, that is already golden territory, as most people will purchase a game either before or within the first couple days to up to a week after release.
But now it can't do that anymore... the new bypass method means any game with Denuvo can now be cracked within a few hours.... Maybe you SHOULD read some of the comments from us "morons"? Or... even better... READ THE ARTICLE which stated this to begin with?
 
I'm not even going to read this slop but just state what all the morons who think that Denuvo isn't worth it keep incorrectly thinking, and that is Denuvo is only meant to protect games from piracy for the first week or so, and that is it. After that sales for most games plummet, and so piracy is a non-issue, so if a game can make it through even the first 24-48hrs, that is already golden territory, as most people will purchase a game either before or within the first couple days to up to a week after release.
Resident Evil Requiem sold 7 million copies despite being "cracked" (HW bypass) from day one. Technically speaking, in my opinion Denuvo is a useless technology relic powered by a very effective marketing ploy.

And anti-user propaganda spread by corporation-loving lost souls.

And now it is completely dead.

In any case, please stop referring to TechSpot stories as "slop". We are all human here, and I despise AI with every fiber of my being so I'm inclined to take this kind of definition on a personal level :-D
 
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I'm not even going to read this slop but just state what all the morons who think that Denuvo isn't worth it keep incorrectly thinking, and that is Denuvo is only meant to protect games from piracy for the first week or so, and that is it. After that sales for most games plummet, and so piracy is a non-issue, so if a game can make it through even the first 24-48hrs, that is already golden territory, as most people will purchase a game either before or within the first couple days to up to a week after release.
Nobody has ever bought a game because it has great DRM. People HAVE, and continue, to refuse to buy games over DRM.

Punishing your paying customer is not a good business strategy. Good games sell well, bad games do not. Those who pirate are not your audience, paying customers are.
 
Denuvo has not lost. These hypervisors are very dangerous and no wise person should use them. Only a few irresponsible guys are using them but the majority of gamers aren't and they still prefer to wait for traditional safe cracks. Irdeto and game companies using Denuvo know about that, and they will never remove Denuvo from their games. The risks you run by using hypervisors are serious: they can hide a backdoor and keylogger can collect all the data in your pc and send them on a hackers server. Keeping internet disabled while playing doesn’t help, as soon as you reconnect to the internet your pc can be compromised. As those hypervisors act as kernel-level malware, there is nothing you can do to stay safe: create a second partition won't help you as being HV kernel-level malware will spread over it as well, plus over the network if you connect other computers to yours, or if you connect usb devices or any other device; disabling internet temporarily only while playing HV games won't help you, as soon as you renable internet your system will be compromised; formatting Windows after using HVs won't help you as malware resists that and stays behind the OS at kernel level; renabling security features after allowing hypervisor in your system won't help you as it's like putting on a bulletproof vest after getting shot. Stay safe and don’t use hypervisors. There is no turning back. Use your brain.

 
Denuvo has not lost. These hypervisors are very dangerous and no wise person should use them. Only a few irresponsible guys are using them but the majority of gamers aren't and they still prefer to wait for traditional safe cracks. Irdeto and game companies using Denuvo know about that, and they will never remove Denuvo from their games. The risks you run by using hypervisors are serious: they can hide a backdoor and keylogger can collect all the data in your pc and send them on a hackers server. Keeping internet disabled while playing doesn’t help, as soon as you reconnect to the internet your pc can be compromised. As those hypervisors act as kernel-level malware, there is nothing you can do to stay safe: create a second partition won't help you as being HV kernel-level malware will spread over it as well, plus over the network if you connect other computers to yours, or if you connect usb devices or any other device; disabling internet temporarily only while playing HV games won't help you, as soon as you renable internet your system will be compromised; formatting Windows after using HVs won't help you as malware resists that and stays behind the OS at kernel level; renabling security features after allowing hypervisor in your system won't help you as it's like putting on a bulletproof vest after getting shot. Stay safe and don’t use hypervisors. There is no turning back. Use your brain.
Let me guess, you work for Denuvo or a game publisher? Yes, enabling hypervisor can allow unsigned drivers to run (it’s how they trick Denuvo), but you can revert once you’ve stopped playing the cracked game… you’re no more at risk than you are playing ANY pirated game. Just make sure you download from a trusted source (ideally private torrent site) and it’s an official release.
 
Well done to all who made this possible. Keep up the good work. Credit also to FitGirl for releasing the Hypervisor titles on her site; it helped to make it piracy mainstream. Hopefully, game developers will realise they are paying Irdeto for the Emperor's New Clothes.

Resident Evil Requiem sold 7 million copies despite being "cracked" (HW bypass) from day one. Technically speaking, in my opinion Denuvo is a useless technology relic powered by a very effective marketing ploy.

And anti-user propaganda spread by corporation-loving lost souls.

And now it is completely dead.
Nobody has ever bought a game because it has great DRM. People HAVE, and continue, to refuse to buy games over DRM.

Punishing your paying customer is not a good business strategy. Good games sell well, bad games do not. Those who pirate are not your audience, paying customers are.
Exactly. It is a flawed premise that DRM protects or ensures sales. If one's game is first rate, it will sell millions. Even pirates like to buy copies if they can afford it and like the game. The best DRM is quality.

Denuvo has not lost. These hypervisors are very dangerous and no wise person should use them. Only a few irresponsible guys are using them but the majority of gamers aren't and they still prefer to wait for traditional safe cracks. Irdeto and game companies using Denuvo know about that, and they will never remove Denuvo from their games. The risks you run by using hypervisors are serious: they can hide a backdoor and keylogger can collect all the data in your pc and send them on a hackers server. Keeping internet disabled while playing doesn’t help, as soon as you reconnect to the internet your pc can be compromised. As those hypervisors act as kernel-level malware, there is nothing you can do to stay safe: create a second partition won't help you as being HV kernel-level malware will spread over it as well, plus over the network if you connect other computers to yours, or if you connect usb devices or any other device; disabling internet temporarily only while playing HV games won't help you, as soon as you renable internet your system will be compromised; formatting Windows after using HVs won't help you as malware resists that and stays behind the OS at kernel level; renabling security features after allowing hypervisor in your system won't help you as it's like putting on a bulletproof vest after getting shot. Stay safe and don’t use hypervisors. There is no turning back. Use your brain.
Whatever the security risks, these games can now be played for free; therefore, Denuvo is not doing its job, and developers are paying for protection that doesn't work.
 
This applies to Single Campaign option only.
I am not sorry, neither surprised to hear this... Game companies made exorbitant profits & still fired ppl..
 
Resident Evil Requiem sold 7 million copies despite being "cracked" (HW bypass) from day one. Technically speaking, in my opinion Denuvo is a useless technology relic powered by a very effective marketing ploy.
Or any game sold on GOG, in its entire history.

It's a myth that piracy lower sales. If that were the case, first we would have independent studies showing it, second we would see a huge drop the minute a game is sold on GOG (without DRM).
 
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