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The Sims 3 Racks Up Over 180,000 Downloads Prior To Release

Bloomberg reports that pirated versions of EA's The Sims 3 were downloaded over 180,000 times between May 18 and May 21. The game will not be officially released until June 2nd, and it does not make use of SecuROM for DRM. Quoting: "That outpaces the 400,000 downloads over three weeks for Electronic Arts' Spore, the most-pirated game of 2008. ... Copies of the game available on file-sharing Web sites aren't the full version, Electronic Arts said. 'The pirated version is a buggy, pre-final build of the game,' Holly Rockwood, a company spokeswoman, said in an e-mailed statement. 'It's not the full game. Half the world — an entire city — is missing from the pirated copy.'"

187 comments

  1. Ill just wait then by Firkragg14 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ill just wait and pirate the full copy when it comes out then. Thanks for the heads up EA i wouldnt wanna pirate a substandard version.

    1. Re:Ill just wait then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bloomberg reports that pirated versions of EA's The Sims 3 were downloaded over 180,000 times between May 18 and May 21.

      Wow! I didn't even know you could download pirated games from Bloomberg!

    2. Re:Ill just wait then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then my revolutiontt ratio will be even higher!

    3. Re:Ill just wait then by node159 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hmm so it sounds like they released/leaked what amounts to a demo, maybe company's could start getting back into the habit of releasing _realistic_, _representative_ demos of games. It would be nice, then I wouldn't need to get a pirated copy just too try and see if it sucks (which it usually does).

      --
      GPLv2: I want my rights, I want my phone call! DRM: What use is a phone call, if you are unable to speak?
    4. Re:Ill just wait then by cstdenis · · Score: 4, Funny

      The pirated version is a buggy, pre-final build of the game

      Sounds like the standard retail version to me.

      --
      1984 was not supposed to be an instruction manual.
    5. Re:Ill just wait then by cstdenis · · Score: 1

      It's not the full game. Half the world -- an entire city -- is missing from the pirated copy.

      The entire world is only 2 cities?

      Don't worry, by the release date there will be another torrent that will patch your install of the other game and add the missing content.

      --
      1984 was not supposed to be an instruction manual.
    6. Re:Ill just wait then by bughunter · · Score: 1

      Put another way, the folks who downloaded bootleg copies of this title but won't buy the retail copies boil down to three categories:

      1) people who won't ever pay for anything anyway,
      2) people who would have bought the retail version but are happy with a half-assed broken bootleg, and
      3) people who were going to buy the retail copy, and couldn't wait for an (illegal) taste, but then discovered it was crap.

      So the last two are categories that EA can count as "losses due to piracy." Group 1) ain't gonna give EA no money, no how, so worrying about them for even a second is a waste of time. However, we can reasonably and confidently count group 2) as a slim minority, so we're left dealing with the last group.

      Gee. How do we entice people to buy our games after they've had a sample? Hmm... that's a toughie. Clearly, we must force them to pay full price before learning that our product is crap. Yeah. That's it. We have a fundamental legal right to sell shit to our customers, and conceal it's shittiness from them until we've collected their money.

      Because making a quality product is unnecessarily difficult, clearly.

      --
      I can see the fnords!
    7. Re:Ill just wait then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was a tester on Sims 3, it was actually pretty clean. Believe me, I've worked on a lot of shitty games that got pushed out despite all the bugs that we testers found, but this isn't one of them. Hell, I'm even gonna buy myself a copy from the company store next week.

      P.S. In case you haven't figured it out yet, I work at EA. Make of that what you will.

  2. andnothingofvaluewasgained by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 0, Troll

    Nice move not using DRM, its a shame its still the most retarded "game" i can think of.

    But hey not everybody can be cool like me and get 9000 head shots on Counterstrike.

    --
    IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    1. Re:andnothingofvaluewasgained by sopssa · · Score: 1

      Nice move not using DRM, its a shame its still the most retarded "game" i can think of.

      However I think the market for game actually lowers the piratism rate for The Sims. There will be lots of younger and older girls wanting to play this game aswell, and most of them (or their parents) will probably buy this game. Atleast way more than with other games. Now I must note that I'm waiting for this game too, so I wouldn't count it as girls-only game either. But the market is bigger with this title.

      Now what makes me sad is that pirates will keep pushing statistics and sales down for usual games they like to play, and EA will just see that The Sims franchise sells so much better than the other games. Now here's a homework for you: Figure out if that will affect what kind of games they like to make.

    2. Re:andnothingofvaluewasgained by sznupi · · Score: 1

      I raise your 9000 with over 9000.

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    3. Re:andnothingofvaluewasgained by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you trying to say girls can't pirate?? Well I have news for you: we can and we do.

  3. Re:What? by sopssa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So guys, you kept saying everyone pirates because of DRM. Well, this doesnt have one now. What excuse should we use now?

  4. It just goes to show... by BumbaCLot · · Score: 1

    People who pirate games on the average will never buy the real game, unless there is strong incentive to play online / multiplayer on an authenticated server.
    I don't think I ever bought a PC game that I didn't HAVE to have a valid code for online play back when I was into Warez other than the Civ series which I expected to be great. Civ 4 was the last game I bought and gave it to a friend after loading the largest world with most opponents and it crashed at over 1GB of used memory 10 hours into it.

    1. Re:It just goes to show... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Civ4 autosaves every few turns you know. Coulda just loaded one of those!

    2. Re:It just goes to show... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wait, so you mean version 4 has higher system requirements than version 2? Oh the horror!

      There were memory leak issues early on with Civ4, but they got fixed up pretty well with patches.

    3. Re:It just goes to show... by BumbaCLot · · Score: 0

      Waiting for patches to get fixed is a major turn off for me these days. When I was a college student and pirating tons of games sure I could wait for a legitimate game to get fixed if I knew I would be playing it for years. Now as a working adult I give a game a first impression and then I'm done with it.

      Good thing the 360 / PS3 allow high resolution gaming that you don't have to worry about getting stuff that won't play out of the box..

    4. Re:It just goes to show... by FileNotFound · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Speak for yourself.

      My steam account has about $1,000 worth of games and yet most are not online games that I could have pirated.

      Thing is, it's easier for me to get them on steam than it is to pirate them. I don't want to deal with cracks, patches, recracks, etc. Paying the $30-40 for a game on steam is worth it just for the fact that I can download it again in a few months or years when I get the itch to play it again.

      The problem with your logic and that of most publishes is that you are trying to prevent a pirated copy from working. This is silly. What they should be trying to do is give incentives to buy a legitimate copy. A few free downloadable content packs that would require online registration is all that's needed to make a number of customers out of pirates. It works for Stardock.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
    5. Re:It just goes to show... by sopssa · · Score: 5, Informative

      A few free downloadable content packs that would require online registration is all that's needed to make a number of customers out of pirates. It works for Stardock.

      Actually, EA is doing exactly this with The Sims 3. When you register your game as legitly bought you get 1000 free points to download more stuff from their item store. So you get the free downloadable content there aswell.

    6. Re:It just goes to show... by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I just found and bought a new copy of the original "Diablo" (originally from 1996). The fact that the game is really easy to pirate and doesn't even need a cd key hasn't stopped me.

      What shocked me is that it is a Windows 9x/NT game that works perfectly on modern 64-bit Windows. I don't even need to set 9x compat mode.

    7. Re:It just goes to show... by AkaKaryuu · · Score: 1

      As someone who purchased every expansion for the first version, the notion that EA is now charging for "Extra Items" infuriates me to no end. They used to give some items for free, on a regular basis. EA didnt have what you wanted? No problem, there were plenty of third party sites to offer you the goods.

      Fuck EA. I'm done giving them my money.

    8. Re:It just goes to show... by BumbaCLot · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sorry if you misread what I wrote, or if it came out wrong. I am not saying people don't buy games, I am saying that people will pirate games no matter what.
      There are those who pirate / steal, and those who don't. Some of those who pirate / steal act like they would typically buy things but then have some excuse on why they didn't this time etc..

      Imagine a poor person who downloads 10 CDs a week, 10 games a month, 10 movies a month etc.. and acts as if they would buy all of the above if they were rich. This is typically bullshit. People steal and steal a LOT! They steal at least one thing per day if not 100s.

      I've yet to meet a pirate who is moderate or only does it once or twice.

    9. Re:It just goes to show... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Paying the $30-40 for a game on steam is worth it just for the fact that I can download it again in a few months or years when I get the itch to play it again.

      Until they ban your account for some arbitrary reason and steal all your games from you.

    10. Re:It just goes to show... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Paying the $30-40 for a game on steam is worth it just for the fact that I can download it again in a few months or years when I get the itch to play it again.

      Assuming Steam still exists in a few years.

      Burn the warez to DVD, store one DVD on the gaming bookshelf, and the other DVD in a filing cabinet in your parents' basement. House burns down 10 years from now? You'll be staying at Mom's for a few weeks anyways.

    11. Re:It just goes to show... by Wicked+Zen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've yet to meet a pirate who is moderate or only does it once or twice.

      Allow me to introduce myself, reformed downloader.

      Whilst waiting tables, shameless downloader and watcher of, uh, "free" cable. Now gainfully employed, happy customer of Steam, Rhapsody, Netflix and Cox.

      Also I discovered I had been being a hypocritical douchebag, and didn't wanna be a playa no more. People can change, and will, if properly incentivized.

    12. Re:It just goes to show... by BumbaCLot · · Score: 0

      Similar story, I subscribe to emusic, audible, netflix. It's really not too much to ask if you have a job.
      The problem is people on Slashdot who complain about the RIAA and how they will never give them any of their money or hating on game producers when really they are cheapskates who won't change.

    13. Re:It just goes to show... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds less like you were "properly incentivised" and more like you suddenly had spare income and could afford to spend on frivolities.

      Find me a job, I'll probably buy more stuff and pirate less!

  5. Finally game for /. crowd... by should_be_linear · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... pretending you have a life.

    --
    839*929
    1. Re:Finally game for /. crowd... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Glad you could join us, #28137283.

  6. Can I wear Hats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and if so HOW many can i wear?

    Slashdot must tackle the big questions.

  7. For fuck's sake, people! by teh.f4ll3n · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Sims? As someone with NO download limit I would still feel it a huge waste to download this (master)piece of crap. I mean come on! Wake up people! You're being turned into minless zombie sheep! Wouldn't play it even if they paid me for it...

    --
    Given the choise between Hitler and RIAA/MPAA I'd go for the first one - at least he knew when to shoot himself.
    1. Re:For fuck's sake, people! by Mantrid · · Score: 1

      Wow you are like so rebellious and really stand out from the minless zombie sheep! I applaud your individuality! Thank you for saving us from the scourg

    2. Re:For fuck's sake, people! by Steauengeglase · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing you have never had a girlfriend/wife/lesbian lover, they eat it up. Mine can waste hundreds of hours and dollars on anything Sims. The office bookcase is literally filled with expansion pack boxes (they make "bonus gift" every birthday and Christmas).

      I'm guessing this game is not going to show up on Steam. Pitty, I already have an account setup for her pop-top stuff, would have been nice to have had it in a single place (other than that shelf).

    3. Re:For fuck's sake, people! by teh.f4ll3n · · Score: 0

      Actually I do (though it has become a long distance relationship lately), and she hates the series. Tried playing Sims 2 once... Took her an hour to get fed up with it. So yeah, I still fail to understand how a person, in his/her right mind can like this game. Sure, mod me a troll, really couldn't care less. The fact stands, this is one of the most pointless and advertised games out there (that and WoW - no flamebait intended, just my PERSONAL opinoin). And people buy/pirate (or rather aks to) it simply because the know not any better. That's why the outrage... stop, think for a while, use your heads for once, insted of blindly following the ads.

      --
      Given the choise between Hitler and RIAA/MPAA I'd go for the first one - at least he knew when to shoot himself.
  8. Holly Rockwood by Andy+Smith · · Score: 1

    "Holly Rockwood" -- awesome name.

    1. Re:Holly Rockwood by BrunoBigfoot · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a celebrity on the Flintstones.

    2. Re:Holly Rockwood by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or a porn star ...

  9. Re:What? by FileNotFound · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ok. Let me try this excuse:

    "I pirated it because I couldn't buy it anywhere."

    There. Done. I'm sure a number of people who pirated will end up buying a real copy once it's released so they can get the online content. But right now if you're itching to play the sims 3 or just see what it's like, you have no other options but to wait or pirate. Most people are quite impatient to say the least.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
  10. Re:What? by PhilJC · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm downloading it so that EA feel compelled to put the DRM back in for the expansion packs. I will then start a campaign to boycott DRM laden games which will be so popular that no one will buy any of the $ims 3 expansion packs thereby killing the franchise once and for all.

  11. Re:What? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    Who said that?

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  12. Re:What? by wjousts · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "I pirated it because I couldn't buy it anywhere."

    Boohoo, god forbid that anybody have to wait a few days for something any more. Seriously, unless you are terminally ill and will likely to die before the official street date, why can't you wait. Don't you have anything better to do?

  13. Let's be honest... by oneirophrenos · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The game's target audience (twelve-year-old girls) probably wouldn't even know how to pirate it, they'll just ask their daddies to get it from the mall. Those who have now downloaded it are probably the bunch who download anything new on TPB as soon as it appears and never pay for anything anyway.

    1. Re:Let's be honest... by cb95amc · · Score: 1

      Based on how many copies of the previous "Sims" games have been sold I'm not sure the target audience is restricted to twelve year olds.....

      I know....I don't understand its popularity either....

    2. Re:Let's be honest... by RattFink · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I know....I don't understand its popularity either....

      It's popular with women (of all ages). To understand it's popularity you would have to under stand women, and quite frankly trying to understand women is all but impossible. I think we are doomed to never know.

      --
      "I don't necessarily agree with everything I say." - Marshall McLuhan
    3. Re:Let's be honest... by FileNotFound · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's an RPG without the geekyness.

      There. Get it now?

      You make a sim, you lvl up your skills, you progress in your job, you get quests, you group with others. In the end you die and make a new character. Repeat.

      It's an RPG. You do understand why people like RPGs right?

      A lot of people claim that sims is a "time managment" game. That's simply not true, managing your time is just the backdrop for the main goal of character advancment.

      Oh and guess what, Sims 3 is an amazing RPG in that it's completley open ended. You make your own story, do your own thing. You can play the entire game without ever getting a job, looting other peoples trash for money and sleeping in their homes. Or you can play a typical recluse and never leave the house, chat online for all social interaction and hack for money.

      If you don't see what the appeal is of a game that lets you do whatever you want, I'm not sure I can help you.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
    4. Re:Let's be honest... by xtracto · · Score: 1

      You make a sim, you lvl up your skills, you progress in your job, you get quests, you group with others. In the end you die and make a new character. Repeat.

      It's an RPG. You do understand why people like RPGs right?

      Not only that but, other RPGs are made for geeks (dungeons? orks? dragons? spaceships? magic swords?, spells? 100% geeks). Therefore, The Sims is an RPG which non-geeks are not ashame of playing and sharing their experience about... and one that girls also enjoy playing.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    5. Re:Let's be honest... by hansamurai · · Score: 4, Funny

      My wife likes to make me and her in the game and then make them have like eight children together...

      This is my life.

    6. Re:Let's be honest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The game's target audience (twelve-year-old girls) ....

      Unfortunately, that is not the audience that actually plays the game.

      Also, what the article fails to mention is that many pirates don't buy games anyway, so it isn't really lost income. It is like the gov't saying it is saving money by cutting funds from an added program in a proposed budget.

      The money was never there in the first place.

    7. Re:Let's be honest... by oneirophrenos · · Score: 1

      If you don't see what the appeal is of a game that lets you do whatever you want, I'm not sure I can help you.

      Can you kill your family? Can you fuck your dog? Can you construct an atomic bomb and detonate it?

      Seriously, I'm asking out of ignorance. If I can do any one of those things, I'll preorder the damn thing right now.

    8. Re:Let's be honest... by cgenman · · Score: 1

      If I can do any one of those things, I'll preorder the damn thing right now.

      You can kill your family. Lead them into the bathroom. Remove door and toilet. Wait.

    9. Re:Let's be honest... by ultranova · · Score: 2, Informative

      Can you kill your family?

      In previous Sims you could, but had to be roundabout about it: for example, set the kitchen on fire so they'll burn, don't buy any food and let them starve, keep them from sleeping and then have them take a swim so they'll fall asleep in the pool. Or just sell the pool ladders while they're there >:). In Sims 2, you could also keep them from getting into their coffin if they're vampires, so they'll die from sunburn. Or the ever-popular trick of selling the only door of the room they're in, thus imprisoning them inside and letting them starve.

      But no, you can't blow their brains out :(. This is a family-oriented game of wholesome entertainment, after all. So any teenager Sim who wants the orphan scholarship for university needs to be clever about killing their parents.

      Can you fuck your dog?

      Sadly, no. Sims 2 had the "romance" life goal of fucking as many people as possible for aspiration points, thought. That was pretty ballsy of EA, now that I think of it, especially since all Sims are bisexual. It wouldn't be that big of a stretch to go from nymphomania to zoophilia.

      Can you construct an atomic bomb and detonate it?

      No, the engine couldn't handle it. But Sims set in the world of Fallout would be really, really cool :). So would a fantasy world, too.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    10. Re:Let's be honest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I'm angry at my fiance i make a special family just to see how many inventive ways I can kill them off :)

    11. Re:Let's be honest... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The Sims should come with coupons for sex aids, travel, family planning, and vasectomy/tubal litigation. Something for everyone!

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    12. Re:Let's be honest... by MancunianMaskMan · · Score: 1

      The game's target audience (twelve-year-old girls) probably wouldn't even know how to pirate it, they'll just ask their daddies to get it from the mall.

      My 12-year old daughter gets her daddy to pirate it off Bittorrent (if there is a DS version anyway, and if others have the cartridge and she wants it too)

    13. Re:Let's be honest... by discord5 · · Score: 4, Funny

      If you don't see what the appeal is of a game that lets you do whatever you want, I'm not sure I can help you.

      Can you kill your family? Can you fuck your dog? Can you construct an atomic bomb and detonate it?

      Not really. but the sims 2 did allow for a lot entertaining sadism. In all honesty, comparing it to an RPG is going a bit too far. I like to think of it as a micro-management less-god-game, where you don't really have a lot of freedom (because you're stuck with the "dialogue" options/careers/whatnot the programmers made for you), but it has a lot of a meta-game aspect to it.

      A woman I once dated for a while really enjoyed the sims 2. She probably had a dozen or so families in her own little town, with meticulously designed houses and carefully balanced schedules heading for that maximum on the career ladder. She was quite the control freak when it came to the game, making sure that most sims stayed the same age as other sims, so she would switch families every time she played for a while. At some point I found myself alone at home with her laptop and the irresistable urge to introduce a little chaos into that perfectly ordered world.

      After taking a backup of the savegames I created a character named Eugene Frankensausage, carefully crafted to be a bald bearded fat man wearing worn out jeans and what looked to be a dirty shirt. His house was a concrete square block adorned only by the mailbox in front of it and a single pink flamingo ornament in the yard. In the first few hours he got to know the neighbours, had sex with them which resulted in a fight, asked one of them to move in, then set the house on fire. This unfortunate process repeated itself quite a few times until he finally learned how to cook at which point the game became a lot more dull. By the end of a boring evening the neatly and carefully organized world had a lot of separated families, widowers, and people generally being in distress. There were also 3 people maneuvering through a small labyrinth in the yard with the end point being aforementioned pink flamingo lawn ornament.

      Now, waiting for her to discover that Eugene Frankensausage had moved into town and not mentioning you had a backup, that was the fun part.

    14. Re:Let's be honest... by discord5 · · Score: 1

      My wife likes to make me and her in the game and then make them have like eight children together...

      RUN!

    15. Re:Let's be honest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, RPGs are great, but why play a game that mimics real ORDINARY life? I mean, fantasy games are great because they bring you to a totally different world. Flight simulators mimic the real world, but they let you do something that you can't do in real life.
      But I really don't understand what you can do in the Sims. What's so great about playing a normal life on a computer?

      (To emphasis it, I'm not saying "teh sims sux" in the form of a question. I'm really asking, because I honestly don't get it)

    16. Re:Let's be honest... by ae1294 · · Score: 1

      The game's target audience (twelve-year-old girls) probably wouldn't even know how to pirate it, they'll just ask their daddies to get it from the mall. Those who have now downloaded it are probably the bunch who download anything new on TPB as soon as it appears and never pay for anything anyway.

      True... but was this really a leak or a clever marketing tool.

      1. Release buggy version, we'll call it shareware (crashes after you get addicted enough)
      2. Release full blown super version with all the DRM in the world to foil those darn hackers
      3. Profit...

    17. Re:Let's be honest... by RattFink · · Score: 1

      Heck mine likes to download sims based on famous people (all guys) shacks 2-3 up in a house and gives them a bunch of babies. All in all it's kind of creepy.

      --
      "I don't necessarily agree with everything I say." - Marshall McLuhan
    18. Re:Let's be honest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jon, is that you?

    19. Re:Let's be honest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Sims should come with coupons for sex aids, travel, family planning, and vasectomy/tubal litigation. Something for everyone!

      "Sex AIDS"??? Isn't that still incurable? Tubal litigation? Is that when you sue your uterus?

    20. Re:Let's be honest... by aafiske · · Score: 1

      Or maybe it's the dozens of people I knew in college addicted to various versions of the game and unwilling to pay money for most anything. So no, I don't think this is just some victimless leetness contest.

    21. Re:Let's be honest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Normal? I didn't know there were aliens, ghosts, vampires, werewolves, genies, witches/warlocks in real life. Those are in the Sims 2 games added in various expansion packs. The witches/warlocks have alignments and spells that are tied to those alignments as well as the ability to create ingredients, potions and objects to be used or sold. It's very easy to avoid having to have a "real" job and live off of the sale of created objects (from $40 ingredients at lowest magic level to $1290 Thrones of Lights at max.)

    22. Re:Let's be honest... by Scotland+Tom · · Score: 2, Funny

      If the first things you think of when you think of a "fun game" are murdering family members, bestiality and genocide you may have other issues to work out before you can understand why The Sims is fun for a lot of people.

    23. Re:Let's be honest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why mods exist.

    24. Re:Let's be honest... by TempeTerra · · Score: 1

      The Sims: buying stuff and telling people what to do.

      --
      .evom ton seod gis eht
    25. Re:Let's be honest... by westlake · · Score: 1

      It's an RPG without the geekyness.
      Sims 3 is an amazing RPG in that it's completely open ended. You make your own story, do your own thing.

      The game developer has all of history to play with.
      The worlds of IF and the world of dreams. Every genre of popular fiction is his to explore and exploit.

      What we get is D&D warmed over.

      The Guiding Light will end this fall after a 75 year run on radio and TV.

      Will Wright was the first to see that the open-ended storytelling of an American soap opera was a viable concept for a PC game.

      The Sims is a "populated world."

      There are children here. Seniors. Teens. Pets.

      Anyone can take center stage.
      You can play with the stereotypes of age and sex - or blast them to dust.

      Pixar understands this - you need look no farther than Up.

      Sexual role playing can be a vital and significant part of The Sims
      You can be crude and kinky and dangerous if you must. There is at least the option of moving beyond Hot Coffee.

    26. Re:Let's be honest... by Scared+Rabbit · · Score: 1

      Only 8? My wife makes us, and then keeps pumping them out to college. She uses cheats to keep us young or something. All I know is that 'our' sims have populated entire towns with our kids. In fact, she can't wait for me to finish working so she can play. Oh and don't get me started on the 'downloads'. My wife has 5.2GB of downloads for the sims 2.

    27. Re:Let's be honest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sounds a little joseph fritzel

    28. Re:Let's be honest... by paganizer · · Score: 1

      OK, my confession: I saw the original promo video for The Sims on a SimCity CD (the same one that had the Sim Mars video), and I've been playing it ever since. Every expansion for Sims 1. Every expansion for Sims 2, except for apartment life.
      I play it for about 3 months, then not at all for 6-9. I get fed up with it. My kids play it about once a week, and have since they could figure out mouse buttons.

      As to your question: you can kill your family. You can do it the way other people mentioned, or with mods; there are guns, overcharge tasers, poisons, etc. you can have a satellite come down and hit some one, or have a plague break out in a house killing everyone there.

      As to the sex with the dog thing: I haven't seen it, except of the "furry" type. You can have sex with any other human type of sim, and people have developed custom animations, like they did in Sims 1, to cover every aspect of human sexuality, from bondage, whip play, to threesomes. There are mods to have a profitable Sex club business with functioning hookers, stripper poles, etc.

      Nuke...nope. I can't see the game being moddable in that way. I have been very surprised that no one has come up with a fight-club type mod; I can easily see that working.

      A LOT of this type of stuff was developed for making Machinima, but I would imagine most of it is because people are perverted.

      The Sims 3 WILL have all this stuff, also, sooner or later. There are just toooo many people who will have copies of the game to not have a high percentage of Deviant coders.

      --
      Why, yes, I AM a Pagan Libertarian.
  14. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    To put it succintly, no.

  15. Re:What? by wjousts · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sadly, the only thing that will ever kill the Sims is somebody making a better Sims-type game. That or putting them in a swimming pool and removing the ladders.

  16. Propered by Spad · · Score: 4, Informative

    Actually, the original release (referred to in TFS, which was beta code) was propered earlier this week - the "current" pirated release is the RTM code.

    1. Re:Propered by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

      It does make me wonder where they're getting it from. Surely EA can plug the leak? (aka fire the leak)

    2. Re:Propered by Spad · · Score: 1

      The Beta probably came from a QA tester or maybe review code sent to magazines. The "current" release is almost certainly from a retailer - the game goes on sale Tuesday next week so it'll almost certainly have shipped out to stores late last week or early this week.

    3. Re:Propered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would they want to? It was probably done with the permission of the execs.
      A 'demo' version gets released and they seem to be aking good use of the publicity.
      If the game fails they can blame it on piracy.
      They can use this as proof they need more DMCA style legislation.

    4. Re:Propered by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Surely EA can plug the leak? (aka fire the leak)

      Once the Gold Master has been shipped to Whang-Dong Fisheries, Automotive and Lowest Bidder Disc Pressing Incorporated, it's out of their hands. The final physical boxed copies ship to and sit around in local distribution centres and storerooms for weeks before the retail release date - there's plenty of opportunity for some minimum wage sleazebag to set that information free.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    5. Re:Propered by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

      Well true about the RTM version, but what about the beta?

      How can they NOT manage to keep the beta private, or know who distributed it?

    6. Re:Propered by infalliable · · Score: 1

      Yes, but this isn't an issue of piracy per se. It is an issue of a lack of "security" of the game code prior to release. That is what allows this entire thing to happen. If you secure the code prior to the release date this doesn't happen. And by security, I don't mean DRM type security. I mean physical security of the data preventing it from being leaked.

    7. Re:Propered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a lot of the leaks come from manufacturing.

    8. Re:Propered by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Point taken, but y'all ever worked in the games industry? The leak is as likely to come from some pissed off dev or tester who's been "asked" to work another 90 hour uncompensated week because the publisher has moved the goalposts again.

      Yes, all builds should be individually tagged and identifiable (with magic strings inside the main binary), and that should be built in to your build system from day one so that no build - whether internal or intended for demoing to the publisher or media - is ever anonymous.

      But then again, the game should ship bug free, and should run at a minimum frame rate, and should meet all the requirements, and should...

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    9. Re:Propered by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

      Actually, I worked on a pc/xbox360/ps3 game which was released a few months back. It was called "Wheelman".

      Go try the 360 demo, it's good fun, if a little unrealistic.

      I've just remembered we did some in-house testing, but also some outsourced testing. It's entirely possible the sims 3 beta leaked from an outsource place.

  17. Re:What? by FileNotFound · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Why wait? What's my incentive here? Oh right - I'd be doing something moraly right. No sorry. Not good enough.

    People will always pick the easiest option. Excersising self control for 2 weeks isn't the easiest thing for most people.

    If they could pay $50 and do a legitimate download I'm sure that at least 10% of the downloaders would have picked a legitimate copy.

    I'm sure 90% would still have pirated it. But that's people who had no interest in buying the game in the first place but may want to mess around with it for a bit - they're not lost sales.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
  18. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We are talking about people who can't wait to consume an entertainment product. I agree with your example, that if someone is terminally ill and won't live to see the release, then I think that it's morally justifiable for them to infringe a copy. It would be on the same moral level as someone who is starving and on the edge of death stealing an apple. It isn't "right", but it's "o.k".

    I cannot understand how you could have been marked as flamebait. I would think that such a geeky contingency here would comprehend the efforts required to make money on the geeky things we love (whether it's producing board game figureens, hacking together code to make software, compiling a version of the bible written in klingon for sale, etc...)

    It was one thing when people infringed copies of Spore due to it's attack on fair use. This, however, is simply a function of peoples' inability to wait.

  19. Re:What? by GerardAtJob · · Score: 1

    They're all trying the game... if it's good and it's missing an entire city, at least 50% will go buy it :)
    Don't forget it's free publicity... but you'll never make EVERYONE buy it... simply because not everyone have money to spend on a PC game. If they don't buy now, they'll buy in the future! Just see it as "free publicity" for this franchise.
    (I played SpaceQuest series when I was younger (pirate version... I was poor at the time...) and guess what? I own it now!)
    (Another example : World of Goo was highly pirated... and check this : http://news.bigdownload.com/2009/01/26/world-of-goo-makes-appearance-on-npds-top-10-pc-games-list/ In the top10 US sales... because it's a GOOD game).

    --
    I can't call that English ;-)
  20. Problem with versioning by zolf13 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Pirated copy is version 0.5 - it has half of the world. So the full version will be 1.0 - it has the whole world. When EA provides version 1.1 will I get 10% of world extra for free?

    1. Re:Problem with versioning by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      Having The Sims (1) played for months which was just a small neighbourhood, I don't think "losing half of the World" will matter.

      They should come up with "It causes BSOD and disk corruption" argument, that is one thing Windows users fear. Blatant lie? Of course but will pirates sue them for spreading FUD about "their" product? :)

  21. Re:What? by Mad+Merlin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The article says it does not use SecureROM for DRM, not that it doesn't use DRM. Anyone know what it does use for DRM?

  22. Of course they say its incomplete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The other city wont "ship" with the game either, its a free download from the yet to launch DLC store. The leaked version is final, anything else they say is ass-covering.

  23. Re:What? by Spad · · Score: 1

    No, I "pirate" games that I've bought because of DRM - most notably Bioshock and Mass Effect because of their asinine restrictions on running things like Process Explorer while playing - though to be fair, even the cracked version of Bioshock wouldn't run if Process Explorer had been used since the last reboot.

  24. This actually hurt EA this time by Aladrin · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I said it. This actually hurt sales of TheSims3 this time. I was going to pre-order it, then heard there was a pirate version before release. One of my friends tried it and she said it was awful. Not enough items, too small, buggy, etc etc. At that point, I decided not only to not pirate it, but not to pre-order it either.

    Now, if I don't hear rave reviews about it, I'm not going to buy it. And I'm not going to bother pirating it, either, for that matter.

    So it's quite possible they'd lost my sale on the game... Only being extremely good will save it. (Without this, being merely 'good' would have been enough.) I'm sure I'm not alone in this.

    --
    "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    1. Re:This actually hurt EA this time by Hatta · · Score: 1

      This actually hurt sales of TheSims3 this time. I was going to pre-order it, then heard there was a pirate version before release. One of my friends tried it and she said it was awful.

      So it hurt EA about as much as a demo version would have. If they had put out a demo, people wouldn't have to pirate to try before they buy. Then the only people who would pirate are those who never would have bought it in the first place, so that can't be considered lost sales.

      Releasing a demo version should encourage people to buy the game. If it doesn't, the game must really be pretty bad, and you don't deserve those sales anyway.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    2. Re:This actually hurt EA this time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and all the female sims have the same face.

      It is like they got the model renderer from AG3, but without the "fun" stuff.

    3. Re:This actually hurt EA this time by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It hasn't necessarily cost them anything, except at launch time. They can roll out some patches and pick you up as a customer on the flip side with the "Special Edition". Early adopters always bear the brunt; these days you don't even get anything for free, just the opportunity to pay extra to get a Master Chief helmet or something. Which, let's face it, is only worth it if you can wear it and it will actually protect your head from something, not necessarily to include covenant weaponry (But that would be nice.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:This actually hurt EA this time by techiemikey · · Score: 1

      Releasing a demo version should encourage people to buy the game. If it doesn't, the game must really be pretty bad, and you don't deserve those sales anyway.

      If the demo doesn't encourage people to buy the game, then it's a bad demo. The problem is most companies make demos off of their beta versions, and as such loose business for bugs not present in the main game.

    5. Re:This actually hurt EA this time by cliffski · · Score: 3, Insightful

      so they played a pre-release incomplete version with half the content missing, and bitched that it was no good.

      *sigh*...

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    6. Re:This actually hurt EA this time by Zerth · · Score: 1

      The real problem is that, while they have added features, they cut out 80% of the features added by expansion packs from the previous version and will rerelease most of those as expansion packs for this version.

      People I know who like this series have mostly said they'll just wait for the all-in-one version in a year or two, if at all, as they feel shorted having to buy it all again.

      I know better, they said that last time as well:)

    7. Re:This actually hurt EA this time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, if I don't hear rave reviews about it, I'm not going to buy it.

      It's a Sims game, you're going to hear rave reviews even if it is terrible.

  25. Re:What? by socsoc · · Score: 2, Informative

    The post has disappeared from EA's site, but

    The game will have disc-based copy protection - there is a Serial Code just like The Sims 2. To play the game there will not be any online authentication needed.

    Google's cache

  26. Re:What? by Narpak · · Score: 3, Funny

    Don't you have anything better to do?

    You do realize that we are talking about The Sims players here.

  27. Re:What? by Krneki · · Score: 1

    The security model employed for offline gaming has nothing to do with pirated games downloaded.

    It all depends on marketing, if you are good at it, a lot of people will buy & download it free from the net. DRM affects only buying customers and does nothing for the illegal market, this is why we hate DRM.

    I don't understand why is so difficulty to understand the fact that you can never stop illegal offline use of your software.

    --
    Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
  28. download numbers are not good statistics by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

    I downloaded it and liked it. I'd like to buy a copy next time I'm at fry's but will probably download the full version when they have it up. It kind of made me miss the good days of shareware and demo's. Game makers stopped doing it because people would try out the game and not buy it because it didn't live up to the hype. Or the game just flat out sucked. This games lives up to the hype and I will buy it. For some it might not have lived up to the hype so they will not buy it. So the download numbers are not a good sample to prove that people that downloaded it liked it and should therefore buy it.

    --
    Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    1. Re:download numbers are not good statistics by space_jake · · Score: 1

      I always thought developers stopped doing demos because because they couldn't spare the development time to make one while trying to rush the over-budget overdue product out the door by holiday season.

    2. Re:download numbers are not good statistics by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      ouch. sounds like someone is a little upset with buggy games. maybe this route of bringing out games will cause that first patch to come out when the "real" game arrives.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
  29. Oh shit, someone thought by Random2 · · Score: 1

    They actually made a good reason to buy the non-pirated game. Kudos to the developers and marketing.

    --
    "Our goal each year should be to increase the number of goals we set for ourselves!"
    1. Re:Oh shit, someone thought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ill just wait and pirate the full copy when it comes out then. Thanks for the heads up EA i wouldnt wanna pirate a substandard version.

  30. Re:What? by archammer2 · · Score: 1

    Well, was there anything resembling a demo anywhere? The only reason I'd have for downloading a DRM-free game is to make sure it doesn't suck before I drop $50+ on it.

  31. Simple Economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As opposed to screwing YOUR wife, because that whore has an inflated opinion of how much she's worth. Of course everyone's going to go for the more reasonably priced alternative.

  32. True test: how many DLs are converted to sale$? by davidwr · · Score: 1

    How many people who downloaded the leaked version will go out and buy the real thing?

    Compare to DRM-crippled software, where there is a strong dis-incentive to take the thing out of the shrink wrap if you did buy it.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  33. Re:What? by wjousts · · Score: 1

    Since it hasn't been released yet, why would there be a demo?

  34. Re:What? by Lapine · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I read in a review they can now get out of swimming pools without ladders. You'll need a room with no windows or doors.

  35. Re:What? by TinBromide · · Score: 1

    Here's my excuse: EA is pirating their own game as an excuse to get DRM back in the game.

    --
    Is it sad that I am more likely to recognize you and your posts by your sig than your name or UID?
  36. Re:What? by TinBromide · · Score: 1

    but you'll never make EVERYONE buy it... simply because not everyone have money to spend on a PC game.

    I have the money, I just wouldn't want to spend it on the sims. I have the time and bandwidth to pirate the sims, but I'm not gonna do that either.

    --
    Is it sad that I am more likely to recognize you and your posts by your sig than your name or UID?
  37. Yeah, EA Store, Digital Download, $49.99 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks, fuck off.
    That game comes out on Tuesday for Fucks Sake.

  38. The Sims is an adult game by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

    I don't understand where you come with 12 year old girl argument but The Sims is really an adult game, adult doesn't neccessarily mean porn btw.

    I have seen 40-50 and even 60+ years old people play it, in fact for some people it was the first and only game they purchased. People still buy content for the game, even the first release still being played.

  39. Re:What? by wjousts · · Score: 1

    I read that too actually. It was in PC Gamers review. Damn EA for removing my choices for torturing my sims!

  40. Who leaked it? by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

    Can you imagine the level of security in such potentially billion dollar project?

    If I was EA investigating it, I would check who would benefit from such leakage. They may come up with very interesting results.

    I can tell as a person who had to carry betacam originals of some ordinary TV shows in a steel case, with guards hired to help and put them in bank safe myself, a hit like The Sims 3 won't leak that easy.

    1. Re:Who leaked it? by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      If it cost them anywhere near a billion dollars to make The Sims 3, they're doing it wrong.

      They probably farmed production out the the cheapest off-shore duplicator they could find and the leak is probably off site. If so, all the upper and middle management should hang for it.

    2. Re:Who leaked it? by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

      I am in a closed beta test of a very small game (in case of budget and users) which is already up and running. They require actually signed (with ink!) paper to be posted in snail mail (no fax) to enter their beta test program. Everything, down to game binary download is encrypted in SSL.

      EA can't be that sloppy, I am not saying it has POTENTIAL to be a 1 billion dollar product in terms of sales in 5 years. I wanted to show that it is not some lonely guys code we talk about. It is sequel to a game which has unbeatable place in Guinness World Records, even in 2009.

      Pre "Gold disk" is always a closed beta, I am just saying if a company gave up a DRM system because of consumer feedback (it killed spore, no less) and a game copy without DRM is leaked and even posters on slashdot starts to question "who to blame", I say look elsewhere. Who benefits?

  41. Re:What? by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

    why can't you wait. Don't you have anything better to do?

    You're seriously asking if people who want to "play" Little Computer People: 2009 have nothing better to do?

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  42. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They could have simply chosen to first sell it online through Steam or through their own online store (at least from the day it was first pirated), and THEN send it to DVD duplication factories, where most piracy happens.

    I'm sure they would have had tons or pre-orders if they said on the day the game was pirated the following on their site: "Get the retail version for 10-15$ less if you pre-order it today"

  43. Re:What? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Funny

    I read in a review they can now get out of swimming pools without ladders.

    That should be based on your Sims' BMI.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  44. Re:What? by Icegryphon · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I could buy some of the anime I watch but then I would half to:
    1. Pay insane import prices. 80 Bucks for 1 disc is way to much(see Kara No Kyoukai).
    2. Have to Crack regional encoding so only playing it on my Computer, Blah
    3. Not have the English sub titles.
    Fansubs FTW. Screw Odex and BayTSP.

  45. Re:What? by Volante3192 · · Score: 1

    Wait, demos are now released after the retail copy of the game?

  46. Mod parent up as funny by Xaedalus · · Score: 1

    I laughed until I hiccup'ed on this one. You are a dead man sir... but I must imagine the punishment you will receive will be worth it.

    --
    Here's to hot beer, cold women, and Glaswegian kisses for all.
  47. The Sims is eerie by Benanov · · Score: 1

    I did that once, made myself and my then-fiancee.

    Sim-me spent the days wandering around seeking human interaction (mostly from Sim-fiancee) while she was really busy.

    Then real fiancee went away to school in the Caribbean and pretty much dropped all contact; I saw her twice in a year and a half.*

    I don't play the Sims anymore. It's like a virtual ouija board.

    (So I started dating someone else...who is now my wife.)

  48. Re:What? by GMFTatsujin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This episode shows that pirates get to the game before your average consumer can touch it, meaning that there's a break in the production pipeline inside EA.

    Their problem is their employees, contractors and distributors, not their customers.

    Put another way: EA's biggest problem is EA. And all the DRM in the world (or none of it, for that matter) can change that.

  49. Re:What? by brkello · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And I am sure a greater number of those people will pirate the full copy. The old argument was that people pirated because of DRM. This shows that argument is false. People are just dicks and want stuff for free. So stop trying to morally justify it. I don't care if you do it, just don't try to make it seem like you are some sort of awesome freedom fighter because you are cheap and lack decency.

    --
    Support a great indie game: http://www.abaddon360.com
  50. Re:What? by Targon · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are a number of reasons why many will pirate it now. For starters, the game is obviously done and is sitting at stores waiting for June 2nd. Due to differences between The Sims 2 and 3 in terms of gameplay, people will want to start experimenting with it early to see if they even want to pay the money for the game. You have those who paid early for the Feb launch, and have lost those deposits(the pre-order coupon they got with their pre-order expired in April).

    The list goes on and on, but the primary reason is you have a rabid fan base who really wants to play the new game, and don't want to be forced to wait until release. Many/most of these will not cancel their pre-order and look forward to their legal copy, so from that perspective, these are people who want what they have paid for or will be paying for in the next week. If you don't care, then of course it is easy to say people should wait, but if you are going to pay for it anyway, why NOT get it a few days early?

    For the younger players, what is better to do, homework?

  51. New business model... by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

    I see it now-- the new business model for games will be to embed advertising in the game itself and then allow it to be pirated. Those billboards in Sim 4 won't interfere with your ability to play or copy the game, they're just there to sell you other stuff you don't need, non-digital stuff you can't download from PirateBay, like graphics cards, video monitors, faster motherboards and diet sodas...

  52. Re:What? by tiananmen+tank+man · · Score: 1

    Why do you think one person speaks for everybody. The game is not even for sale, so how do you know it is not going to be bought? Do you know who has to deal with drm issues if present, the legit customer is who.

  53. Re:What? by omris · · Score: 2, Funny

    I am not convinced. A high BMI would give you more mass to haul out of the pool, but it would also make most of that mass much more buoyant. It probably evens out in the end.

    I was sort of entertained that in Sims2 they even HAD a BMI. Or at least variation. I always wished I could change their height. A sim version of me doesn't look right unless it's short.

  54. Boring games by petrus4 · · Score: 1

    I got nearly all the expansion packs for the original, (I think Makin' Magic was the only one I missed) and three for the Sims 2.

    The only two activities I ever really got out of the games were house designing, and trying to also create buildings which allowed the AI to perform optimally/doing stuff to mess with it. Trying to model the faces of famous people in the Body Shop in the Sims 2 and then upload said faces was a reasonably enjoyable method of wasting time, as well.

    Apart from that, the Sims really doesn't offer anything at all unless you're playing it with someone else. If you're playing it alone, however, the boredom can literally become physically painful. To make it even worse, at least the Sims 2 only ran on Windows; Wine couldn't run the version of DirectX it used.

    If you're going to buy the Sims 3, you will get the most out of the game by either a) not going into Live mode, or b) if you do go into Live mode, realising that what you're essentially doing is directing/producing your own soap opera. I can see that having limited appeal for women, but I would have thought that even for them it would get old pretty fast, because there's only so many different kinds of drama that the Sims' interactions can generate.

    I'd rather play Nexuiz, or Warsong Gulch in WoW, personally; those games generate much more of an emotional response.

  55. Re:What? by demonbug · · Score: 2, Funny

    And at the low, low price of only $9.99!

  56. will it work through wine? by spectro · · Score: 1

    Some of EA's disk copy protections doesn't work through wine, Simcity 3000 as an example, a classic I would like to play every once in a a while. I bought a copy of it for like a penny at Fry's but can't play it :-(

    I would buy this new one if it works through wine, no way I am installing any Microsoft crap at home just to play a game.

    --
    HTML is obsolete. It's time for a new, simpler and richer markup language.
  57. Re:What? by cj1127 · · Score: 1

    So the amount of time and effort somebody else put into perfecting a massive piece of software counts for nothing if they don't get it to YOU, when YOU want it, in the medium YOU want and at a price YOU dictate? Sounds reasonable and unselfish. The reason most people torrent stuff like this is, basically, greed. There are some justifications, sure, but the whole "try before I buy" arguments and all its bastard offspring are pure fiction.

  58. Re:What? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Informative

    A high BMI would give you more mass to haul out of the pool, but it would also make most of that mass much more buoyant. It probably evens out in the end.

    Having experienced a broad range in my life I have to say that no, it doesn't. Having more surface area means that you have more drag, too. It's the muscles that get you out of the pool.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  59. Shareware? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So there's a downloadable, crippled version out on the internet that gives you a taste for the game, but if you buy the release in stores or from EA you get all the content.

    Coinciding conveniently with ads on tech sites talking about "download to get a full new city!"

    Honestly I'm beginning to think l33t warez is quickly becoming the software vendor's guerrilla marketing campaign. Like Adidas giving shoes to the cool kids in high school, make the game accessible to people who will play it and talk.

    Still waiting on my Adidas... oh wait...

    -Matt

  60. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The I couldn't buy it anywhere else argument is valid in other countries where the game is not released at the same time or not released at all.

  61. All I can say is WTF ? by daveime · · Score: 1

    'The pirated version is a buggy, pre-final build of the game,' Holly Rockwood, a company spokeswoman, said in an e-mailed statement. 'It's not the full game. Half the world -- an entire city -- is missing from the pirated copy.'

    So, EA decide to sell a game without making any demos available.

    Then an EA employee manages to get a pre-final build of the game, with half the data missing, and posts it on torrent sites.

    Then EA complain about piracy of a broken not-even-beta quality build ? I suspect a lot of people who downloaded it thought is *was* a demo, seeing as how it is apparently so broken.

    Either it's a publicity stunt to show why we "really need DRM after all", or they have no internal security inside EA when any employee can walk out with in-design code. Or both probably.

    1. Re:All I can say is WTF ? by DragonTHC · · Score: 1

      I have to agree.

      Why would EA leak a pre-rtm build of sims3? This hardly seems logical.

      And we know that it was EA who leaked it. No one else had access to that build did they?

      So why would EA leak this build if not to test the waters by baiting the pirates?

      This is proof that EA leaks their own pirated games.

      --
      They're using their grammar skills there.
  62. Re:What? by omris · · Score: 1

    See, having a high muscle mass, I always felt like I was getting cheated.

    You mean I'm fat AND I sink? Way to go, physics.

  63. I pirate rarely by BitterAndDrunk · · Score: 1
    Just as a counter-example. I regularly buy albums from iTunes, games from Steam/Impulse, and I'm also not averse to downloading a record or two.

    I don't do it very often at all; I think I pirated 5 albums in 2008, and no games

    Honestly, I wish I'd pirated World of Goo. It was way too short for $20 I thought.

    --
    You better watch out, there may be dogs about . . .
    1. Re:I pirate rarely by BumbaCLot · · Score: 0

      I myself am a moderate, and now two others have come forward. But check the SNR of people spouting crap on every YRO story on here and the loudest are probably the stereotype I am referring to.

  64. Re:What? by Jugalator · · Score: 1

    So guys, you kept saying everyone pirates because of DRM. Well, this doesnt have one now. What excuse should we use now?

    Inferior distribution network? ;-)

    Why aren't these guys officially distributing this game already with BT technology and a password scheme on thesims3.com?

    Exactly. :-(

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  65. Re:What? by Jugalator · · Score: 1

    Boohoo, god forbid that anybody have to wait a few days for something any more. Seriously, unless you are terminally ill and will likely to die before the official street date, why can't you wait. Don't you have anything better to do?

    Maybe the user is interested in the game?

    It's as if you ordered a camera and is a photographer. Do you want to wait it to arrive, or have it there to play with now?

    It's a physical impossibility to get a shipping by the postal service skip ahead in time, but not with piracy.

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  66. Re:What? by skeeto · · Score: 1

    You are confused. It does have DRM, just not SecuROM.

  67. Re:What? by sopssa · · Score: 1

    You are confused. It only has serial.

  68. Buggy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, the pirated version sure didn't seem buggy to me.

    1. Re:Buggy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It isn't, but I guess there may be a bug or two that were fixed for the RTM version (see Razor's proper release).

      And yes, it is missing half of the play area as it isn't on the disc. It ships with one town/city to play in, and you get another one as download when you register your copy online. I'd say that is a pretty good incentive to pay for the game if The Sims is your thing...

      Besides, the pirate copy requires you to block access to network (either with application firewall or by just unplugging the network cable). Otherwise the game silently auto-updates, rendering the crack non-working. This means your average clueless idiot probably can't even get the pirate copy to work.

      I wouldn't worry too much about EAs revenues. They are going to sell The Sims 3 by the boatloads and rake in cash through their online additions (items through microtransactions) etc. - the pirate copy is "crippled enough" without online additions that it is effectively a limited demo.

  69. Re:What? by WagonWheelsRX8 · · Score: 1

    I was going to make this very point but am glad I'm not the only one thinking this. EA of course is not the only company who's its own worst enemy (or best friend depending on how you look at it...because if it wasn't leaked early we wouldn't be talking about it, and that many fewer people would even know the game existed). Of course, if the 'leak' was done intentionally I am sure there was a cost analysis done as to the potential benefits vs. drawbacks (in order to monetize their consumer base as much as possible). But, I'm still in agreement...its not the consumer's fault that their product is available before they wanted it to be.

  70. Re:What? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The old argument was that people pirated because of DRM

    Nice straw man, but the real argument is that people who would otherwise have bought legitimate copies pirate because of DRM. Other people would have either pirated or gone without. When making financial decisions, you should ignore these people because nothing you will do will make them pay for your product. Punishing the people who want to buy the legitimate version with DRM does not make people who, as you put it, are just dicks, into customers.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  71. WHo the fuck are you ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am not without decency you fucking asswipe! I am as fucking decent as any motherfucker is, so cram it up your god damn motherfucking asshole you dick face douche bag hore fucking high-o-mighty shithead

  72. Re:What? by Cyberllama · · Score: 1

    Cause this is a pre-release leaked copy. I'm sure lots of people just really want to play this game since its been a highly anticipated title. I have no doubt that many of the people who downloaded it already have legitimate copies reserved and will still go out and buy the game when they can.

  73. Re:What? by sopssa · · Score: 1

    The "DRM" you are talking about is just checks that you have the DVD in drive. That doesn't count as DRM.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_rights_management
    "The term is used to describe any technology which makes the unauthorized use of such digital content and devices technically formidable, but generally doesn't include other forms of copy protection which can be circumvented without modifying the file or device, such as serial numbers or keyfiles."

    Nobody ever talked about DRM when mentioning those serials since the 80's. It only means those situations when game exe or disc (or video content or whatever) contains those encryptions etc shit (that also can break more or less in certain situations).

    Serial code is still a good, non-bothering system. It has some effect to bring down the casual copying, you can restrict online content with it and it works always.

  74. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mod parent up. There's no question in my mind people are just assholes who want stuff for free. Moral justifications or not, they are thieves plain and simple.

  75. Re:What? by Adriax · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bullshit. I grabbed the final 3 expansions for sims 2 off torrents, tried them out, and promptly deleted them. I learned my lesson after the final sims 1 expansion...
    The final expansion in particular. They took the demo concept of sims 3 (apartments, playing your sims while other families are active), tacked on the half assed magic stuff from sims 1, and called it an expansion.
     
    The sims series is interesting and has a lot of potential, but it's really damn obvious the EA execs treat it as nothing more than a cash bag.
    Need more money? Have a modeler modify 6 of the existing models to have some different angles, have a texture artist create a basic texture like duckies on blue background and use it for everything, and sell it for $19.99 as a stuff pack. Bonus if they can get some big name furniture maker to pay them to tag a name into the descriptions of the new models.
     
    Reviews are bullshit. Demos are haven't been worth trying, if you can find one, since the fucking 90s. And game companies will tack a $20 price sticker on every 5 minutes of work they can get away with.
    My money is precious to me, it provides a roof, clothes, and food to my little girl. I sure as hell am not going to toss it at EA every time one of their artists takes a day to make new textures. I download when needed to make informed decisions about where my limited budget is going to be spent.

    And no, I'm not one of those 180k downloaders. Making the decision based off half a game is pretty damn worthless and a waste of bandwidth. I won't need to anyway, a friend of mine is planning on buying it when it comes out, so I can try it at his place this time around, just like he tried 1 and 2 at my place when they came out.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it!
  76. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You realise BMI measures body mass, not body fat right? This includes muscle mass. Most athletes are 'overweight' or 'obese' on BMI charts yet have very little body fat.

  77. Re:What? by Joce640k · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up. This has NOTHING to do with DRM.

    --
    No sig today...
  78. More piracy = less sales, right? by clone53421 · · Score: 1

    That's what they've always told us.

    Or is it the other way around?

    Time will tell...

    --
    Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
    1. Re:More piracy = less sales, right? by brkello · · Score: 1

      Or maybe life isn't black and white...maybe there are other factors...oh, like maybe a game that is more known about/anticipated will be more pirated than one no one cares about? Simply saying that a lot of people downloaded it and it is successful so piracy is good is flat out stupid.

      --
      Support a great indie game: http://www.abaddon360.com
    2. Re:More piracy = less sales, right? by clone53421 · · Score: 1

      Simply saying that a lot of people downloaded it and it is successful so piracy is good is flat out stupid.

      No stupider than saying "A lot of people downloaded it and sales are low so piracy is bad".

      --
      Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
  79. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Demos have consistently made me a legit customer several times over the years, where are the demos?
    More importantly, I hate EA/Maxis's expansion pack system. Gotta be like $220 if you want all the new stuff. No game franchise punishes first adopters like The Sims.

  80. Re:What? by BikeHelmet · · Score: 1

    Lets wait and see how well it sells before we point fingers. ;)

    Most of those downloaders are probably just eager to get it early. It makes them feel special/happy. If the game is solid, that should translate into more sales.

    Demigod did well enough, didn't it? Things looked bleak for it in the first few days!

  81. Not Worth The Money by Ender77 · · Score: 1

    I have seen the "Demo" out there and let me just say it is NOT worth the money they are charging. It is obvious that a lot of stuff was taken out of the game to be nickled and dimed to the public. If you buy it, you are getting ripped off big time, I suggest holding off a few years until they released a sims3 complete package for 20 dollars.

    1. Re:Not Worth The Money by SirAdelaide · · Score: 1

      They won't ever release it all for $20. Sims 2 still costs over $300 to get all the expansions.

      --
      I'm a fruit pirate. I bought a watermelon once, and spat the seeds in the back yard. They grew into another watermelon,
  82. Or in other words... by Rooked_One · · Score: 1

    "Woops! We had someone steal the game from us... So - instead of charging you down the road for an expansion, we'll play dumb and just throw it in with the official release."

  83. Re:What? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

    They got a buggy crappy half-finished game. The real meter here isn't who pirates it or how much; it's how many legitimate users do they get? The game might turn out a following 4 times bigger than Spore. It may also turn out that more people pirate it, but more legitimate users buy it as well, on a disproportionate scale. It's also possible we don't actually have a great way to tell who illegally downloads what, because, shit, then the RIAA could actually legitimately sue you for shit instead of just blasting a shotgun full of John Does at everyone and weeding out the results.

  84. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My money is precious to me, it provides a roof, clothes, and food to my little girl. I sure as hell am not going to toss it at EA every time

    Who's holding a gun to your head?

  85. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You fool! Don't you realize that those responsible for the Sims are the very same ones responsible for Family Guy? Putting them in a pool and removing the ladders is exactly what the manatees would want!

    To the GP I say good luck to you sir! I hope you succeed where Cartman has failed!

    (I hope the connection between the GP's plan and these 2 episodes of South Park makes sense to at least a few others and isn't just a product of my NyQuil-laden brain)

  86. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It rarely happens, how many folks pay for a game after they finished playing it? In the future, they'll just pirate Sims 4 thinking they'll pay for Sims 5.. the cycle continues...

  87. Less pirates = more buyers ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, yes, it is the other way around.

    why this board so fucking slow? And messed up to boot?

  88. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe you should just stop playing video games.

  89. Re:What? by SpecBear · · Score: 1

    So guys, you kept saying everyone pirates because of DRM. Well, this doesnt have one now. What excuse should we use now?

    [Citation needed]

    Who are these guys who said everyone pirates because of DRM?

  90. Re:What? by Adriax · · Score: 1

    No one (yet, though that's an argument for the next attempt to legalize drm enforcement goonsquads), I do have money to spare to provide myself and my family with entertainment, but it is not unlimited.
    On one side I cannot go without entertainment of some sort, and computer games tend to provide the most efficient time/dollar ratio. On the other side I can't just blindly toss money at every new game and expansion that comes out. I have fallen for a couple bad purchases in the past (like that stupid 1001 games CD walmart had when I was in HS, chock full of demos and crappy card games).

    If it came down to it, that I would have to trust 3rd party reviews and press info entirely for my game purchase decisions instead of grabbing the thing off a torrent and trying it, I just wouldn't buy. I'd pick up the occasional good one if someone I knew took the plunge and found a good egg, or if something got consistently good reviews and ended up in the $10 section of walmart, but that's it.

    Call me a pirate all you want, but I saved myself $90 on those worthless expansions, and because I didn't waste that money I not only have it to purchase this new sims, but I'm not so disappointing that I'm not even considering the purchase.

    --
    I don't suffer from insanity, I enjoy every minute of it!
  91. Stats and CDs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most probably half of the downloads were media agencies, anti-piracy groups and EA employees trying to investigate the leak ;)

    On a serious note, I have pre-ordered the Sims 3 for my wife as a surprise. She said to me "I won't bother buying it... i'm sick of this software having to hammer my CD/DVD reader... I'd rather the pirated copy instead - I can play that one without the discs.".

    I guess that's a bit like my kid's DVDs that I bought. The first minute is "copyright notices" from around the world, the next two minutes are an extremely loud video (that agitages the kids) that says "you're a thief because YOU steal movies and break into cars" and then I sit through four minutes of crap adds before I have to press "start" to get the movies going. On the other hand, I can download the same thing from the net without being insulted - and without having the kids pissed off for waiting over 5 minutes to watch the movie.

    For the record, we bought the sims and sims2 sets of games over the years. I've stopped buying most CDs and DVDs because i'm just sick of being f***ed around as a legitimate consumer.
    I sincerely apologize to the artists for any lost revenue.

    Go figure....
    AC
    PS F*** the RIAA/MPAA/FAST/etc.

  92. Re:What? by brkello · · Score: 1

    It's only a straw man if that isn't the argument other people use. You are just changing the argument to something that is impossible to prove. This is just how you feel...purely opinion. You might as well say that people pirate because God came down and told you to pirate.

    But according to you, when making financial decisions, you want the company to focus on the smallest percentage of people. Those who are picky and know how to use a torrent. You want these people to be catered to? Sorry, Slashdot does not represent the average person. The argument to not use DRM because some small number of people claim they won't pirate if it is DRM free doesn't make financial sense. Since you like to interject with something that is purely opinion, here is my opinion back: these mystical people you describe, the ones that don't buy because of DRM, are probably still going to come up with bull shit excuse to pirate the game. Meaning you might as well put a cheap, effective DRM (like a CD key or sell through Steam) to prevent casual piracy.

    --
    Support a great indie game: http://www.abaddon360.com
  93. Does not have SecuROM? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then explain why my anti-virus gone crazy when I tried to run the game with the original .exe. Prompts popped all over the place asking me to allow some "SecuROM" thing to mess with my registry.

    If you wanna test that by yourself, try to run the game with the uncracked "TS3.exe" (not the launcher). You won't be able to enter the game obviously, but you'll see that SecuROM exists, and is trying to do something.

  94. Why does it matter how many pirated? by Gel214th · · Score: 1

    Why does it matter the number of people that pirated the game?

    That's irrelevant.

    The question is, what effect does that have on Sales of the game? To date, no one can answer that question, and no publishers have been intelligent enough to do the research that answers that question.

    Will the Sims 3 be available for digital download worldwide on release day? Will it cost 200% more outside the US to download the game if it is available?

    Publishers are either disingenuous about DRM and Piracy or they are run by stupid and shortsighted people. It's probably actually a combination of the two.

    And now the media, ever the bastions of Independent,intelligent and responsible reporting have begun to parrot statistics on how many copies are pirated. It's easier to find out the number of copies that are pirated than to find out how many copies were actually sold, if that number ever gets reported.

    And that too is indicative of the underlying problems which never get addressed.

    --
    -Gel214th
  95. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When making financial decisions, you should ignore these people because nothing you will do will make them pay for your product.

    Truth. If I were unable to download games for free, I would still only be buying Diablo 3 on it's release.

  96. Re:What? by MogNuts · · Score: 1

    You know, I have to agree with your comment on reviews being BS. So many games which got great reviews were bad or boring. So many which got poor reviews were really good, great, or fun. I was just thinking about that the other day playing Age of Conan. Everybody hated it. I played the 7 day trial this week. That game is just a plain blast. And I've been playing RPGs since Dragon Warrior 1 (NES) and Final Fantasy 1(NES), so I'd like to think I have some semblance of a decent opinion on RPGs.

    Others:

    Alone in the Dark: awful reviews, but if you learn some advanced techniques, is quite easier, and I would say because of the story and such, quite possibly one of *the* BEST games I've ever played. Never been hooked more on a game in *years*.
    Dark Sector: alot of fun, not amazing but a pretty good alternative when you are done with RE 4/5. But got awful reviews.
    Assassin's Creed: so much fun, yet got mediocre reviews.

    OTOH:

    COD4: amazing reviews. I thought it was the most boring, generic shooter I ever played. Would play it, think it was awful, put it down. I only gave it a few shots more just because it was supposedly a greatly reviewed game.
    Half Life 2's: great reviews. To me, an awfully boring, un-fun game. Shoot a few guys, walk a few min. Jump on boxes. walk for a few min. shoot, walk, boxes, walk--rinse, repeat ad nauseum. i couldn't take it after a few hours total of playing.

    So yea, I think ur totally right. When u said that, it just hit me--reviews are total bullshit. And as a side note, I almost forgot how they are just extensions of paid advertising.

  97. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well I mean, snarky comments aside, he's right (the GP). Most people won't wait and that's probably the real reason they are downloading it (all morality aside). I'd be interested in the piracy figures within 3 days of the release to a few weeks after. Those are the important ones, if the game is good at all.

    I'd also argue the Wolverine leak probably didn't cause too many lost box office ticket sales. People who'd go to the trouble to get and watch a unfinished version were probably all too happy to watch it in the theater. For the rest of us, we heard a week or two after how bad it sucked and decided to wait for Star Trek instead.

  98. Now that it's actually out by Verdatum · · Score: 1

    I have no doubt the pirated version is buggy. The official release is buggy to the point of being unplayable.