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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.'"

10 of 187 comments (clear)

  1. 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?

  2. 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.

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    In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
  3. 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?

  4. 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.

  5. 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.

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    In Soviet Russia, the television watches YOU!
  6. 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*...

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    DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
  7. 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.

  8. 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.

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  9. 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).

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    GPLv2: I want my rights, I want my phone call! DRM: What use is a phone call, if you are unable to speak?
  10. 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.

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