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SecuROM: Difference between revisions

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[[wikipedia:SecuROM|SecuROM]]<ref>https://www.pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/SecuROM</ref> was a piece of [[DRM]] developed by [[Sony]] for PC games and first released in 1998. Historically, SecuROM is well known for being the most agitating form of [[DRM]] of the 2000s, and its inclusion within [[Electronic Arts]]' Spore has led to the game retaining its position as the most pirated game to-date.<ref name=":0">https://torrentfreak.com/spore-most-pirated-game-ever-thanks-to-drm-080913/</ref> SecuROM stopped being supported by Sony quietly, however a rough estimate for the final SecuROM-protected title of around a few years after [https://www.pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/Onyx Onyx]'s release in 2017 would be a reasonable guess. <!-- Can we fix the template to be for software at all? -->{{InfoboxCompany
[[wikipedia:SecuROM|SecuROM]]<ref>https://www.pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/SecuROM</ref> was a piece of [[DRM]] developed by [[Sony]] for PC games and first released in 1998. Historically, SecuROM is well known for being the most agitating form of [[DRM]] of the 2000s, and its inclusion within [[Electronic Arts]]' Spore has led to the game retaining its position as the most pirated game to-date.<ref name=":0">https://torrentfreak.com/spore-most-pirated-game-ever-thanks-to-drm-080913/</ref> SecuROM stopped being supported by Sony quietly, however a rough estimate for the final SecuROM-protected title of around a few years after [https://www.pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/Onyx Onyx]'s release in 2017 would be a reasonable guess.
 
In 2014, SecuROM would get a sibling that would soon replace it, known as [[Denuvo]]. <!-- Can we fix the template to be for software at all? -->{{InfoboxCompany
| Name = SecuROM
| Name = SecuROM
| Founded = 1998
| Founded = 1998
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https://cracklab.team/PAunlock/ -->
https://cracklab.team/PAunlock/ -->


== General problems ==
==General problems==


=== Optical drive bugs ===
===Optical drive bugs===
Various releases of Secu-ROM have been known to sometimes struggle to even detect legitimate copies of games inside users' disc drives.<ref name=":1">https://web.archive.org/web/20191105161102/https://www.tweakguides.com/Piracy_9.html</ref> Additionally, some optical drive models were simply incompatible with SecuROM.<ref name=":1" /><!-- We should find more documentation than what has been provided by Wikipedia -->
Various releases of Secu-ROM have been known to sometimes struggle to even detect legitimate copies of games inside users' disc drives.<ref name=":1">https://web.archive.org/web/20191105161102/https://www.tweakguides.com/Piracy_9.html</ref> Additionally, some optical drive models were simply incompatible with SecuROM.<ref name=":1" /><!-- We should find more documentation than what has been provided by Wikipedia -->


=== Explicit Congestion Notification ===
===Explicit Congestion Notification===
ECN, a feature seen on Windows Vista which helped users with still connecting online with large networks, was required to be turned off due to how SecuROM functioned.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20080926003605/http://www.pcworld.com/article/150965/casual_friday_why_spore_wont_work.html</ref>
ECN, a feature seen on Windows Vista which helped users with still connecting online with large networks, was required to be turned off due to how SecuROM functioned.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20080926003605/http://www.pcworld.com/article/150965/casual_friday_why_spore_wont_work.html</ref>


=== Software conflicts ===
===Software conflicts===
Secu-ROM also fought multiple other pieces of software<ref name=":1" />, one of which being Process Explorer<ref>http://forum.sysinternals.com/printer_friendly_posts.asp?TID=10337</ref>
Secu-ROM also fought multiple other pieces of software<ref name=":1" />, one of which being Process Explorer<ref>http://forum.sysinternals.com/printer_friendly_posts.asp?TID=10337</ref>


=== Installation Limits ===
===Installation Limits===
Users who owned SecuROM-protected games would often be allotted a limited number of times that they can install their games. EA's Spore had a limit of 3 installs (raised to 5), Bioshock had 2 (raised to 5, before being removed) and would even limit installs per user on the same device,<ref>http://www.neoseeker.com/news/story/7091/</ref><ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20071013211034/http://maxconsole.net/?mode=news&newsid=20470</ref> and Mass Effect had 3, however uninstallations would not increase the number of installs unlike other SecuROM titles.
Users who owned SecuROM-protected games would often be allotted a limited number of times that they can install their games. EA's Spore had a limit of 3 installs (raised to 5), Bioshock had 2 (raised to 5, before being removed) and would even limit installs per user on the same device,<ref>http://www.neoseeker.com/news/story/7091/</ref><ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20071013211034/http://maxconsole.net/?mode=news&newsid=20470</ref> and Mass Effect had 3, however uninstallations would not increase the number of installs unlike other SecuROM titles.


=== Degradation ===
===Degradation===
Due to the security features introduced by [[Microsoft]] to [[Windows]] 10 and later, many older SecuROM titles <!-- Mostly found through comparing data on older games on newer hardware. I believe SecuROM titles that released about 5 years before Win 10 can still be run, however I have yet to locate enough software with SecuROM to do a controlled sweep to be certain. ATM, I can run 2012's Crysis just fine on both my Win 10 laptop and Win 11 desktop.
Due to the security features introduced by [[Microsoft]] to [[Windows]] 10 and later, many older SecuROM titles <!-- Mostly found through comparing data on older games on newer hardware. I believe SecuROM titles that released about 5 years before Win 10 can still be run, however I have yet to locate enough software with SecuROM to do a controlled sweep to be certain. ATM, I can run 2012's Crysis just fine on both my Win 10 laptop and Win 11 desktop.


I am prepared to document EA's fuck-up on the wiki whenever secu-rom finally fails on my legitimate copy of Crysis. Oh, and C&C3. --> cannot function on modern hardware without cracking or other means of circumvention.<ref>https://www.legoisland.org/wiki/SecuROM</ref>
I am prepared to document EA's fuck-up on the wiki whenever secu-rom finally fails on my legitimate copy of Crysis. Oh, and C&C3. --> cannot function on modern hardware without cracking or other means of circumvention.<ref>https://www.legoisland.org/wiki/SecuROM</ref>


== Notable Anti-consumer events <!-- Organize the list by release year! --> ==<!-- Reference PC Gaming Wiki for other games to list here
==Notable Anti-consumer events<!-- Organize the list by release year! -->==<!-- Reference PC Gaming Wiki for other games to list here
https://www.pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/SecuROM -->
https://www.pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/SecuROM -->
{| class="wikitable"
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== References ==
==References==
<references />
<references />

Revision as of 00:40, 22 January 2025

SecuROM[1] was a piece of DRM developed by Sony for PC games and first released in 1998. Historically, SecuROM is well known for being the most agitating form of DRM of the 2000s, and its inclusion within Electronic Arts' Spore has led to the game retaining its position as the most pirated game to-date.[2] SecuROM stopped being supported by Sony quietly, however a rough estimate for the final SecuROM-protected title of around a few years after Onyx's release in 2017 would be a reasonable guess.

In 2014, SecuROM would get a sibling that would soon replace it, known as Denuvo.

SecuROM
Basic information
Founded 1998
Type {{{Type}}}
Industry Digital Rights Management
Official website https://securom.com


General problems

Optical drive bugs

Various releases of Secu-ROM have been known to sometimes struggle to even detect legitimate copies of games inside users' disc drives.[3] Additionally, some optical drive models were simply incompatible with SecuROM.[3]

Explicit Congestion Notification

ECN, a feature seen on Windows Vista which helped users with still connecting online with large networks, was required to be turned off due to how SecuROM functioned.[4]

Software conflicts

Secu-ROM also fought multiple other pieces of software[3], one of which being Process Explorer[5]

Installation Limits

Users who owned SecuROM-protected games would often be allotted a limited number of times that they can install their games. EA's Spore had a limit of 3 installs (raised to 5), Bioshock had 2 (raised to 5, before being removed) and would even limit installs per user on the same device,[6][7] and Mass Effect had 3, however uninstallations would not increase the number of installs unlike other SecuROM titles.

Degradation

Due to the security features introduced by Microsoft to Windows 10 and later, many older SecuROM titles cannot function on modern hardware without cracking or other means of circumvention.[8]

Notable Anti-consumer events

Game Release year Notable effects Relevant article
BioShock 2007 Users were limited to 2 installs of the game, and had to call in to be allowed further installs. It was raised soon to 5 after a misprint of a phone number in a manual, and eventually the limit discontinued in 2008, however it took much longer before editions of BioShock would be officially released without SecuROM.
Mass Effect 2007 Mass Effect was the first SecuROM game known to not refund installations for users, and also required that the game installation to be verified every 10 days. [9]
Spore 2008 The application of SecuROM in Spore left the program trapped under always-online DRM[10], which in the 2000s was fatal for anyone's internet bills. The popularity of this game, mixed in with its preemptive cracking, and DRM led to the title holding the record as the most pirated video game.[2] Additionally, there were lawsuits that formed over the implementation of SecuROM inside Spore.[11][12]
Tron: Evolution 2010 Towards the tail-end of SecuROM's usage in 2019, Disney decided to terminate their license, thus leading to all legitimate copies of Tron: Evolution to be unplayable, and the game was subsequently pulled from digital software vendors.[13] Disney claims to be currently updating the game to not have SecuROM, however after nearly 6 years since its termination, there has been no new updates upon whether the game will re-release
Final Fantasy 7 (PC, re-release) 2012 The distribution of the re-release of FF7 for PCs caught users off guard when Square Enix distributed this version with SecuROM, and on release, servers were inaccessible, so users could not verify their licenses until much later.[14]

References