Denuvo has been cracked in all single-player games it previously protected — 2K Games and Denuvo reportedly retaliate with mandatory 14-day online checks
Temporary success for the red team elicits a collective cheer.
We've reported previously on the feats of the skull-and-bones community against Denuvo's DRM. The cat-and-mouse game has essentially come to a head for now, as the pirate crew has "officially" reported that, as of yesterday, there were zero games with Denuvo that haven't been cracked or bypassed.
This development should be of little surprise to those following this story along, but here's a quick recap: in late 2025, the MKDev collective and the prolific DenuvOwO came up with a hypervisor-based bypass (HVB) that installs a kernel-level driver to intercept and respond to Denuvo's checks. While that's not an actual crack, it's good enough for piracy work, as the saying goes. Simultaneously, voices38, a well-known cracker, also fully stripped a few choice titles of Denuvo entirely, including recent releases like Resident Evil: Requiem.
As a somewhat predictable response, Denuvo and 2K Games reportedly just added a 14-day mandatory online check to several titles, including NBA 2K25, NBA 2K26, and Marvel's Midnight Suns. This is impossible for the HVB to emulate, as it's a request/response call to Denuvo's servers and thus in practice can't be replicated. At some point, the code that executes this check could be removed, but that requires a full game crack rather than the HBP.
This harkens back to the dark ages of online requirements for single-player games and is likely to pose a problem for gamers with spotty internet connections or who travel a lot. Needless to say, honest gamers will also be locked out of their games if Denuvo's servers experience problems, too. The "new" check differs from the existing one-time activation that Denuvo performs when the game is first launched, which persists until a hardware or software change.
Regardless, it wasn't difficult to imagine that sooner or later, all extant Denuvo-protected games would fall to the pair of proverbial swords. "Sooner" was the safest bet, and its bell rang yesterday, when the list of uncracked or non-bypassed games dropped to zero. Moreover, while the HVB method previously required users to disable most every single one of Windows' security measures, the current "V3" method has a relatively minor impact on prospective gamers' PCs.
As it stands, to run a HVB game, one needs "only" to disable Core Isolation (aka Memory Protection), and then toggle Driver Signature Enforcement off (DSE), run the game, and turn DSE back on. In fact, the most recent version of the famous "VBS.cmd" script is reportedly even easier to use, and game-agnostic to boot.
Although keeping Memory Integrity off still opens up a significant attack surface, and gamers are required to trust pirates with installing a kernel-level driver, the situation is a far cry (pun intended) from the early 2026 days when it was even necessary to fiddle with motherboards' UEFI and disable Secure Boot.
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The eyepatch-wearing community is patting itself on the back, with known repacker FitGirl congratulating the collective efforts of DenuvOwO and voices38, as good an endorsement as they come within that crowd. It's also an implicit seal of approval for the relative security of the releases in question, as FitGirl is widely trusted as a release curator.
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Bruno Ferreira is a contributing writer for Tom's Hardware. He has decades of experience with PC hardware and assorted sundries, alongside a career as a developer. He's obsessed with detail and has a tendency to ramble on the topics he loves. When not doing that, he's usually playing games, or at live music shows and festivals.
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beyondlogic Honestly this is just pathetic denuvo has no real benefit apart from being a royal hindrance to hardware. Maybe they should develop a engine with better security features not punish normal users for there own bad choices. And a online safety check is nonsense and essentially tells the user you own nothing as what happens when the servers that do these checks don't work I've already seen this nonsense with fable 3 with windows live nonsense.Reply -
MrN8 I have been a PC gamer all the way back to the C64 days. Game piracy was common for decades but just before the pandemic, piracy was almost gone. For a while, games were starting to be reasonably priced and gamers were content to pay rather than risk pirated copies and the security risks they posed. Then the greed of the gaming industry went into overdrive. Now games cost double what they used to and are often a massively buggy experience. Piracy is on the rise again but it is the industry's own fault. Game companies pushing poorly optimized social engineering experiments on gamers for top dollar. They are getting what they deserve.Reply -
Sh00P00Mag00 Reply
Back then games only cost a few quid but we still pirated them. It was the thrill of it i guess. These days I buy second hand keys to play games that are now a few years old. They're still new to me but I point blank refuse to pay top dollar for zero day purchases.MrN8 said:I have been a PC gamer all the way back to the C64 days. Game piracy was common for decades but just before the pandemic, piracy was almost gone. For a while, games were starting to be reasonably priced and gamers were content to pay rather than risk pirated copies and the security risks they posed. Then the greed of the gaming industry went into overdrive. Now games cost double what they used to and are often a massively buggy experience. Piracy is on the rise again but it is the industry's own fault. Game companies pushing poorly optimized social engineering experiments on gamers for top dollar. They are getting what they deserve.
It's like these kids that pay a fortune for a 240hz monitor. Just no need. Then again, they don't live in the real world with bills to pay etc. 💀 -
Math Geek if you wait a couple years, not only will it be very cheap, but they'll have the "complete edition" with all the DLC and such included. with a sale easily less than $10 most of the time.Reply
from what i see only EA likes to keep all that expensive DLC separate. the base game might be dirt cheap or even free, but there will still be $100 in DLC to get. so yah screw EA lol -
parkerthon Reply
Yeah I am 46, but I bought a 1440p 480hz OLED monitor about a year and half ago. I have a budget and this pushed it, but I am on this PC non-stop and it's worth every penny. I only play 6 hours a week, do work on it about 40-50. I would never go back to any other panel type. Backlight glow sucks for so many reasons. Higher refresh rate is nice up to 120hz or so and after that it loses any additional benefit for me. I don't play online competitive FPSs so that little bit of fractional millisecond latency reduction by playing at an ugly 1080p, mid detail, with high frames is not of interest to me whatsoever. With a 5070 Ti, I push 100+ fps for 1440p native in most games I play and its silky smooth for my old eyes trying to keep up with fast panning camera action and dark scenes actually look pitch dark.Sh00P00Mag00 said:It's like these kids that pay a fortune for a 240hz monitor. Just no need. Then again, they don't live in the real world with bills to pay etc. 💀 -
parkerthon Reply
2K sucks on PC anyway. Also EA Sports games in general are just cash cows. They stripped basic offline single player and couch coop gameplay features out that used to make these games have real value only to push their online play and loot box crap. Or non-stop DLCs... pick your poison. They are a service with a gambling hook, not a game you ever own to play a sport you follow(or want your kids to follow).Admin said:Denuvo has been bypassed in all single-player, non-VR games it previously protected with the widely-publicized hypervisor bypass.
Denuvo has been cracked in all single-player games it previously protected — 2K Games and Denuvo reportedly retaliate with mandatory 14-day online... : Read more
I mean to a certain point I get it. The amount of money they are paying for player NIL, teams, league licensing etc every year... it's absurd. It's like these pro sports don't get that so many people learn about the sport by playing it in a video game first. It comes back to them in the form of more viewership and direct revenue IRL, but they want their money up front I guess to the detriment of converting less fans over time. -
DRagor I'm not sure what this '14 day online check' is. It sounds like when you buy game you have to wait 2 weeks before you can start playing it or what? In that case gaming industry is shooting itself again, just making pirates win again.Reply -
Lamarr the Strelok Reply
I think you'll have to verify it when first bought then again in 14 days. I'm just glad I'm done with rockstar and especially 2k. Truly dirtbag people and companies.DRagor said:I'm not sure what this '14 day online check' is. It sounds like when you buy game you have to wait 2 weeks before you can start playing it or what? In that case gaming industry is shooting itself again, just making pirates win again.
And EA will get worse.Take a look at who is gonna buy them soon.(pending approval of course.) -
MrN8 Reply
I think the purpose of the 14 day online check is twofold. Firstly they want to block access to the flood of people who will be using the new Denuvo cracking trick. Secondly they will want to count and record IPs of all attempts to launch their games that fail the online check to see how much damage it is doing to their sales. They will likely cross reference the IPs with their current client database to see how many paying customers just stopped paying and turned to piracy instead. It looks to me like they are trying to put a financial figure on how much this crack has cost them. This is the first steps for them to take legal action against someone if they have the evidence.DRagor said:I'm not sure what this '14 day online check' is. It sounds like when you buy game you have to wait 2 weeks before you can start playing it or what? In that case gaming industry is shooting itself again, just making pirates win again. -
Buzdalys Reply
1 - monitors are affordable nowSh00P00Mag00 said:Back then games only cost a few quid but we still pirated them. It was the thrill of it i guess. These days I buy second hand keys to play games that are now a few years old. They're still new to me but I point blank refuse to pay top dollar for zero day purchases.
It's like these kids that pay a fortune for a 240hz monitor. Just no need. Then again, they don't live in the real world with bills to pay etc. 💀
2 - not everyone lives from paycheck to paycheck; yes, everything is expensive, but having a 240hz monitor doesn't mean you're filthy rich, just that you earn enough and are willing to spend ONE TIME on a monitor that will last several years
3 - saying "these kids" literally makes you sound like a teenager, just cringe
4 - your "real world" may be gray but that doesn't mean everyone else's also doesn't have colors; stop being so ignorant