Sorry, Switch fans. This is one port no one was begging for: Irdeto, the company behind anti-piracy tool Denuvo, announced on Wednesday that it's bringing «Nintendo Switch Emulator Protection» to the console, pairing a very popular gaming handheld with a very unpopular bit of DRM.
Denuvo's PC DRM implementation has been criticized for years now for harming game performance, which the company has always denied. In our own testing of Final Fantasy 15 back in 2018, we found no performance impact—but other games have shown players had good reason to be worried. A cracked version of Resident Evil Village ran better with Denuvo removed, and last year 4X strategy game Humankind dropped Denuvo before launch because the performance of its implementation «was not good enough.»
Even if Denuvo only occasionally affects performance, that possibility hangs over any PC game that uses it like an ugly specter.
While the company behind Denuvo calls it an anti-piracy tool, the announcement of its new Switch DRM ignorantly lumps in completely legal emulation with piracy. Just look at how it introduces its new tool in this press release:
«Even if a game is protected against piracy on its PC version, the released version on Switch can be emulated from day one and played on PC, therefore bypassing the strong protections offered on the PC version. This can happen with any of the numerous games available on Switch.»
The press release goes on to say it will «block unauthorized emulations on PC.» Which, again, are legal—Switch emulator Yuzu even has a walkthrough on how to dump your own games from your own Switch. «Unauthorized» is not the same thing as illegal. If you rip your own Switch game, you should be able to play it on PC.
Piracy exists,
Read more on pcgamer.com