In April, hackers announced a complete victory over Denuvo. According to tech enthusiasts, they have cracked all existing games with this DRM protection.
For a long time, Denuvo was considered practically uncrackable protection, but everything changed with the emergence of a cracking method via "hypervisor" — Denuvo in games simply began to be bypassed. As a result, modern releases like Atomic Heart, Total War: Warhammer III, EA SPORTS FC 25, and more were cracked within a few months. The formidable protection did not save Resident Evil Requiem and Pragmata from such a crack either.
However, cracking via "hypervisor" has a technical nuance: to run "cracks," it is necessary to disable security systems, which creates additional risks for PC players. Nevertheless, there is an "old school" cracker — a hacker under the nickname voices38 releases classic DRM protection cracks.
The company developing Denuvo has long known about the "hypervisor" loophole and has already confirmed that they will fight this method of cracking games. Some players fear that an enhanced version of the protection could negatively affect game performance.