I’ve always bought my games on steam or OFFICIAL key resellers (GMG) since I was an adult, but sometimes it has got really expensive.

Do you consider ‘cracked games’ safe for your PC, your data, and finally your privacy?

You should always support developers, but it’s not always possible.

  • FPSXpert@discuss.online
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    2 hours ago

    If it’s a “trusted” source, as in a popular one, such as a certain link from a certain girl that is fit, yes.

    Otherwise another option I’ve done for a while was buying cheap keys from greymarket type resellers, though for those I only did them from AAA publishers never putting their games on sale and on a second account (idea being you minimize risk and if something did turn out to be a stolen key, which was a problem for a while on those kinds of sites, a chargeback isn’t going to hurt a AAA publisher as much as an honest small published in house indie dev team).

  • _cryptagion@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    19 hours ago

    Well, since I run them in Linux, they’re basically sandboxed in an environment that most malware isn’t made for, so as long as I’m downloading from reputable sources like Fitgirl or DODI, yeah. I figure my chances of picking up a virus from a source like that, given my setup, is highly unlikely.

  • Fenrisulfir@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    Have a dedicated gaming pc that you never login to any of your real accounts with. Keep it off the network you use with the rest of your machines. Install windows and all the legit software you need. Create an image of your disk. Install pirated games and play them. Every so often wipe your disk and reset to your image.

  • Imprint9816@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    I would say that online games anti cheat systems are probably about as bad as it gets for privacy.

    As others have said its more risky to use pirated games from a digital security perspective especially if you are running it as an administrator. So its good to try and find a source you trust and monitor your system for suspicious activity.

    My bet is most users here do not practice good data security and assume their “common sense” will prevent them from malicious files.

  • liliumstar@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 days ago

    Running any binary that you can’t examine the source of (and confirm it was built from it without modification) is risky. It’s mostly a balance of trust and risk. Even developers have been known to insert what we could malware.

    That said, if you get your cracked content from a trusted source, I’d say it’s generally safe. Otherwise, exercise extreme caution.

    Is GMG an official reseller? Maybe I am out of the loop, but I thought they operated in the grey market.

    • FPSXpert@discuss.online
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      2 hours ago

      GreenManGaming is a legitimate reseller, in a similar fashion to humble bundle or similar sellers.

      I also do not like them because their keys if you are buying on sale for a new launch, their keys are usually UK based as they are UK based and they will not let you play on sooner launch dates, as I learned with Mirrors Edge Catalyst’s release when I wanted to play on day 1 and should have bought direct through origin, but instead now I had to wait a week, and they did not offer a refund policy.

      So instead I bought the game again on origin and gave away the other key as a free giveaway to spite them 😂

  • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 days ago

    GOG digitally signs their games and have no DRM, thus no need for cracks.

    If you can get a hold of a GOG version, you can check its validity.

    For games outside the GOG ecosystem, they are all unfortunately at risk.

    I played Baldur’s Gate 3 via a pirated GOG version on release with friends until I was able to afford my own copy, then moved the saved game over to the legit copy.

      • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 days ago

        You do, especially if its a new game.

        I had seen other comments mentioning the same and had considered mentioning that is out of reach for a lot of people but then didn’t.

        Like my PC is running STALKER 2 great on the lowest settings, but if I had to run it through a VM first I would lose a lot of performance and probably dip below 60fps.

        Most games people want to pirate are brand new so telling them to do something like reformat their (probably only) PC to run baremental Linux with a Windows VM for the game is just silly and unreasonable. At that point you may as well just buy the game if you need a whole extra computer to pirate it safely.

        I couldn’t possibly run brand new games in a VM and I only have one computer that can even play modern games. Silly suggestion.

  • secret300@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 days ago

    hmm… lets see. Do I buy and download the game filled with a rootkit or download the version that doesn’t have one?

  • schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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    3 days ago

    No.

    I pirate everything, but am very very reluctant to do so with software or games.

    I only pirate in cases where the company involved is just too gross to support (looking at you, Adobe), or if there’s absolutely no other option.

    But I consider pirated software and games absolutely suspect 100% of the time, because I’m old enough to remember when every keygen was also a keylogger, and every crack was also a rootkit and touching any pirated software was going to give you computer herpes without fail.

    So maybe it’s not that bad anymore, but I mean, do you fully trust in the morals of someone who would spend the time helping you steal someone else’s shit to not add just one more little thing to it for themselves?

    • datavoid@lemmy.ml
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      3 days ago

      every keygen was also a keylogger

      Always worth rolling those dice - think of the amazing trackers jams!

    • gemew26@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      3 days ago

      Exactly my thoughts. I already missed a deal on GMG twice because they’re not super clear when they’re discounts ends, and I were too late. I won’t buy a game full price on steam so unofficial key resellers are probably what I’ll use.

      Since the money won’t go to the developers for sure, I thought I may as well pirate it, but yeah I’m a bit concerned about safety tbh. It isn’t anime or netflix we’re talking about.

  • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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    3 days ago

    Run them in a sandboxed VM?

    VM escaping is not impossible, but its probably outside of the ability of most cracked games with malware.

    Even better; Go with a bare metal linux install, and then use a sandboxed VM.

    Even less malware is going to be able to VM escape and then also have any idea of what to do in a linux environment, purely because the vast, vast majority of exploits (I should say malware, not exploits per se) are designed to fuck up Windows.

    Is this perfectly safe?

    No, but nothing is.

    Any legitimately purchased game with closed source, kernel level anti cheat could be doing literally anything to your PC, and you wouldn’t know.