Denuvo properly cracked in Resident Evil: Requiem, bypasses become plug-and-play — cracked version runs faster, smoother, and uses way less VRAM and RAM
Is that burning smell coming from Irdeto's offices?
If you've been following the story of Denuvo's recent struggle against the weaponization of savants in the piracy scene, there's a juicy double-whammy of news on that front. Grab your popcorn or fire extinguisher, depending on which side you're on. First, voices38, who's been steadily cracking Denuvo-protected games for a while now, released a full crack for Resident Evil: Requiem, a title that's just over 40 days old, with the DRM fully disabled. It also runs much better than the bypassed version.
As if that weren't enough bad news for Denuvo's parent company, Irdeto, the existing hypervisor-based bypass (HV) that currently requires disabling most of Windows' security layers is seemingly getting a serious upgrade. According to MKDev member KiriGiri, the bypass should soon become plug-and-play, as "[they] found a way to make HV crack to be used without disabling any windows security or other things" (sic).
If you're not up to speed on all this, the summary is that Denuvo has been successfully bypassed across many new games, resulting in zero-day repacks out on popular sites like FitGirl's. However, said bypass is cumbersome and risky; its characteristics are bound to change as soon as it receives the purported upgrade. Moreover, it keeps Denuvo's code in the game, leading to the usual performance penalties famously associated with the DRM.
A traditional crack, meanwhile, strips away or neutralizes all Denuvo code in a game. Doing that takes a particular set of skills, and the cracker (or group) voices38 has been the one spearheading efforts, slowly but surely cracking 2024 and 2025 releases.
The release of a crack for Resident Evil: Requiem, a title that's only 40 days old, implies with high likelihood that Denuvo will get completely stripped out of recent games soon enough. Voices38 has reportedly been working on toolkits for contemporary Denuvo for a long while now, and it apparently took them only two weeks to pull off this latest feat after all the virtual ducks were in a row.
The cracked Requiem predictably runs faster, smoother, and uses far fewer resources than the HV version, and presumably by extension, than the full paid-for release. One point does not a dataset make, but ChillyWillMD ran a quick comparison between the two versions, and the cracked one delivers roughly 5% better FPS, a shocking 1.5 to 2 GB drop in VRAM, and sometimes close to 1 GB drop in system memory usage.
Our trusty eyeballs also say that the CPU spike and frametime graph is slightly improved on the cracked version, with fewer CPU usage spikes and sometimes lower frametimes — both exceedingly important for a feeling of gameplay smoothness. The tested system has an Intel Core i9-13900K CPU and an RTX 3090 graphics card. We hypothesize that machines with weaker processors will see even greater benefits from removing Denuvo.
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This spells serious trouble in all-caps for Irdeto, as now there's a two-prong attack against Denuvo. The company predictably already promised upgrades to its software, all while running the game at the standard user-space operating system layer. The DRM developers have to get really creative now, and as the saying goes, may the odds ever be in their favor.
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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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alrighty_then The fact the cracked version won't require an internet connection and perfroms better is really a death blow. It did take a long while to crack Denuvo, to their credit.Reply -
Trake_17 Why not just ask Claude to write you a new game that doesn't have Denuvo. Aren't we, like, a month from that along with world ending AI that can crack everyone's bank accounts and corrupt every OS? So suggest the latest news of "Mythos". What a world. It's back to barter and farming for us all. Denuvo is the least of our concerns.Reply -
usertests Reply
Subscribe to Tom's Hardware Premium to learn more: https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/artificial-intelligence/anthropics-claude-mythos-isnt-a-sentient-super-hacker-its-a-sales-pitch-claims-of-thousands-of-severe-zero-days-rely-on-just-198-manual-reviewsTrake_17 said:Aren't we, like, a month from that along with world ending AI that can crack everyone's bank accounts and corrupt every OS? -
Joomsy Since it wasn't mentioned in the article, another benefit of voices38's work is that their releases work under Proton on Linux. This is a first for Denuvo cracks, as even EMPRESS releases won't run. The HV method also doesn't work since it relies on technologies specific to Windows, however, there are talks of it someday being adapted to KVM in order to attain Linux compatibility. It's just anybody's guess as to when that'll happen.Reply -
LordVile Reply
Nousertests said:Subscribe to Tom's Hardware Premium to learn more: https://www.tomshardware.com/tech-industry/artificial-intelligence/anthropics-claude-mythos-isnt-a-sentient-super-hacker-its-a-sales-pitch-claims-of-thousands-of-severe-zero-days-rely-on-just-198-manual-reviews -
LordVile Reply
Nope, an AI spitting out nonsensical “exploits” isn’t much to write home aboutTrake_17 said:Why not just ask Claude to write you a new game that doesn't have Denuvo. Aren't we, like, a month from that along with world ending AI that can crack everyone's bank accounts and corrupt every OS? So suggest the latest news of "Mythos". What a world. It's back to barter and farming for us all. Denuvo is the least of our concerns. -
ejolson I'm not a legal expert, but it seems to me patching a binary for compatibility with Linux and better performance is different than if piracy were the intention.Reply -
hotaru251 critical info is: it wasnt the same version. they were different builds of denuvo so not a 100% appels to apples but was good comparison & damns the denvuo "doesnt impact performance" claim.Reply -
TerryLaze Reply
Legally it's not, any circumvention for any reason at all is the same amount of illegal.ejolson said:I'm not a legal expert, but it seems to me patching a binary for compatibility with Linux and better performance is different than if piracy were the intention.
Just watch louis rossmann on youtube.
Back when games still came on physical media you had the right to make a 100% copy including all of the protection, as an backup only for yourself, that was fine.