Like many recent Capcom games published on PC, Resident Evil Village(opens in new tab) included everybody's favourite anti-piracy software Denuvo (opens in new tab)when it launched back in May 2021. Also like many recent Capcom games published on PC, the DRM has now been quietly removed.
As chronicled (opens in new tab)by VGC, Denuvo's removal from Village was initially reported by the website Dark Side of Gaming(opens in new tab), then verified by SteamDB(opens in new tab), which tracked a new change to the game stating «Removed 3rd-Party DRM – Denuvo Anti-tamper, 5 different PC within a day machine activation limit.»
Whatever your perspective on video game piracy, Resident Evil Village's Denuvo protection caused more fundamental problems for many players, with reports (opens in new tab)that the DRM's presence could severely impact game performance. These reports were confirmed when Capcom released an update to Resident Evil Village designed to «optimise the anti-piracy technology.»
Bundling PC releases with Denuvo seems like standard practice for Capcom's big titles, with Resident Evil 2 Remake(opens in new tab), Resident Evil 3 Remake(opens in new tab), and Monster Hunter(opens in new tab) World all launching with the anti-piracy software included (all of which later had the software removed). Denuvo has lingered in Village for an unusually long time, however. The game's anti-piracy software was cracked around a month after launch, yet it's taken Capcom almost two years to ditch Denuvo. Then again, at least Capcom removed Denuvo deliberately, unlike Warner Bros Games Montreal, who accidentally ditched(opens in new tab) Denuvo from Gotham Knights last October before adding it back in (which no doubt helped that game's
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