source: http://gamemag.ru/news/drm-zashchita-dragon-ageinquisition-denuvo-antitamper-ubivaet-ssdhdd-101753
And a rough translation and synopsis from a Russian speaker:
Want to know how many times the average of the code LoF.exe (Lords of The Fallen) being transferred from HDD to memory and back in one hour? 150,000 operations of copy-write. This is 10,000 times greater than normal. DRM continuously decodes the game code into memory and encrypts it back. This is one of the most retarded use of encryption techniques which I have ever seen. Despite the fact that the small pieces of code (maximum 2 kilobytes per entry), are stored in one memory block. Playing the game for 4-8 hours (depending on the quality SSD) means that memory block will be gone forever.
If this is true, this is extroardinarily bad for users playing Denuvo-protected games off of an SSD. The one thing you really do not ever want to do with an SSD is constantly rewrite data since NAND flash has a finite life expectancy.
Once again, gamers who legitimately buy their games are being screwed over by DRM and when the pirates crack Denuvo (and they will - it's been cracked before), they won't have to worry about it at all. Nice job, Denuvo.
Hopefully now that this article is out in Russia and beginning to circulate in the West, it will be confirmed by another party such as PC Gamer, Eurogamer, or RPS. With Dragon Age: Inquisition being as long of a game as it is, I'm not sure I want to risk putting my host SSD through 10,000 times greater stress than normal.
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