and thouosands of gamers get turned into a bot net attacking the game servers, or worse. The day some major title gets pawned via a malicous trainer or some other game related program like a parser ect. Game companies are playing with fire with some of these malware like crack protection schemes. create an old school game trainer software, that uses the Dennovejunk crack to inject pretty much anything you want.
![denuvo performance denuvo performance](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/avwLrOBOxS4/maxresdefault.jpg)
If one was inclined it would be trivial to use the same crack keys to inject just about anything into a running kernal on users playing said games. Really the gaming companies should be thankful that none of the nice game cracking folks have used their "Crack" method as an injection point. I'll turn in my geek card Dennovejunk is malware. That will be the day I let any software company have access to my kernel space on purpose so they can run a DRM check.
#Denuvo performance cracked
yet the cracked versions, run flawlessly and when you factor in 7-10% performance hits on windows for stupid malware DRM, that small hit using DXVK or VKD3D are completely offset. There are plenty of games that won't run under Linux officially. the only games I can't run just fine are ones riddled with malware. I spend more then enough on games every year.
#Denuvo performance update
We've approached Capcom for comment and will update with any further information. However, on the other hand, the notion of any DRM system incurring a seven per cent in-game hit to performance on a processor as capable as the Core i5 8400 (which runs six cores at a peak 3.8GHz) is certainly concerning. On the one hand, modern gaming PCs should have the CPU overhead to run the extra load incurred by what our tests suggests to be the Denuvo DRM. Left is with Denuvo enabled and right is without Denuvo.Īssuming that the only difference between the two builds is indeed the inclusion of Denuvo, or the lack of it, the evidence looks conclusive. I included images showing the performance difference from the Steam user that created the guide. Devil May Cry 5 is fairly light on CPU usage according to Richard Leadbetter.
![denuvo performance denuvo performance](https://www.dualshockers.com/static/uploads/2021/09/deathloop-game-1140x641.jpg)
They experienced a 7% difference in performance between the builds, but only at low resolutions. Digital Foundry has tested the file to see the performance difference between Denuvo on and off. A Steam user created a guide for downloading the file, but Capcom took the file down.
![denuvo performance denuvo performance](https://static3.srcdn.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/death-loop.jpg)
Capcom accidentally left a developer branch of Devil May Cry 5 public that didn't have Denuvo copy protection added to the files.