Assassins Creed Origins players are having trouble using the CPU from the game. Although the game is known for using too many of the computer resources, Voksi cracker says that what really blames is the development and distribution company's efforts to protect against piracy.
Those who deal with the matter know that their protection Denuvo has gone on a walk, and so Ubisoft allegedly has called for reinforcement forces that stick to the most powerful engines.
"It is an anti-consumer and disgusting move."
Υπάρχει πόλεμος στο Διαδίκτυο. Από τη μια πλευρά είναι οι εταιρίες παιχνιδιών, οι εκδότες και οι εταιρείες προστασίας από την πειρατεία, και από την άλλη, άνθρωποι που με διαφορετικούς λόγους θέλουν να παίξουν ή να δοκιμάσουν παιχνίδια free.
Although both groups are free to fight in any way they choose, there are collateral casualties. Those who pay for the games are treated equally problem with those using broken software.
In the last few days, some of his players Assassin's Creed Origins they reported too many problems playing the game.
"What is the normal CPU usage for this game?" asks an Assassins Creed Origins user on Steam forums. "I have between 60% and 90% and I wonder if the percentage is very high or not."
This particular user reports that he uses an i7 processor, which is very powerful. However, for those running a CPU with less oomph, things are even worse.
Another gamer, with an i5 processor, reported an 100% workload on all four processor cores, even when choosing lower graphics settings in an attempt to release resources.
What could be causing these problems? Bad computer settings? Bad codification; Probably not…
According to Voksi, whose team "Revolt" broke Wolfenstein II: The whole problem is directly linked to the desperate anti-piracy measures the company has taken.
As we mentioned in previous posts its anti-piracy technology Denuvo it has been hacked by crackers. Various release groups break the protection within hours of the game's release, making locking the software almost pointless. However, in Assassin's Creed Origins, Ubisoft decided to double down on security, Voksi reported to Torrentfreak.
"Basically, Ubisoft has implemented VMProtect over Denuvo protection, raising the game's resource requirement by 30-40%. This requires an expensive processor just because of DRM. ” "It's an anti-consumer and disgusting move."