![]() If anything, the evidence suggests that this is more likely to be a Kojima thing than a 505 thing. In fact, they've released quite a few titles without the DRM, and I think their most recent prior use was in Abzu and Adr1ft in 2016. I'm looking through some of their other games on Steam right now, though, and I'm seeing quite a few with no DRM, not least Bloodstained, which released simultaneously on Steam and GOG. If nothing else, he chose a publisher who employed anti-consumer DRM. >if he is the one responsible for this, he will instantly become my latest blacklist entryīlacklist away. I can't tell whether he's talking about that specific decision to delay or the general decision to use DRM in the first place. >DRM is not something our team makes the decision onīut this is in reference to the delay shortly before release, after which it turned up with the unannounced DRM attached. ![]() Source.Ī little digging, however, turned up this source, in which another developer states that: All I recall was one of them complaining that it was implied that the developers alone were responsible for issues with the DRM/offline gameplay. >Remember how much Taxman and Stealth were pissed off because Sega included Denuvo in Sonic Mania ![]() Incidentally, Ground Zeroes was released before Denuvo started trading. I just used their most recent major releases as comparison points (someone else here also did so, for other reasons). When a miner solves a block, they append a transaction to it which says "I am paying myself the block reward" (currently 25 BTC, originally 50 BTC - halving every 210,000 blocks until all 21mil BTC are in circulation).ĭidn't say they did. If solutions are found at a faster or slower rate then the difficulty retargets to try to get back to 1 block being solved every 10 minutes. Essentially, looking at the amount of processing power available in the network, the peers determine how much difficulty is required to find these difficult to compute hashes every 10 minutes. A value called "difficulty" is used as part of the calculation of each block, determining the number of 0s which must be present at the start of a computed hash for a proof of work to have occurred. Bitcoin defines checksums beginning with lots of 0s as difficult to find, and defines the block time as 10 minutes. Certain information from a block is combined with a nonce to find cryptographic checksums (using the Secure Hashing Algorithm 2) which are mathematically difficult to compute. Blocks are a summary of all transactions which occurred during a period of time in the Bitcoin network. When you send Bitcoins to someone you are creating a cryptographically verifiable and irrevocable record in a distributed ledger called the "blockchain". The answer is fairly simple: See the Bitcoin whitepaper Section 4 ("Proof of Work") Doing this can increase your chances of finding more higher quality seeds for every torrent. If you're using qBitTorrent like me, open the options, select BitTorrent in the left pane, check "Automatically add these trackers to new downloads," then paste the list of trackers there. Most torrent clients have an option to automatically add a given list of trackers to each new torrent. ![]() If you're not using a VPN, don't worry about any of that.ĮDIT: For anyone checking this thread for similar issues, check for the latest list of torrent trackers. If you're using a VPN like PIA, try a network with Port Forwarding (Toronto on PIA), and change your incoming port in your torrent client settings to the port listed in your VPN client. In addition to all that, you may also want to check your network settings and maybe try a different client. Some sites list the trackers available for each torrent, and those can be added to a torrent you're already downloading to pull a bigger pool of possible seeders. If you do get good speeds with the linux distro, try finding some more trackers for your torrent or a different torrent all together. If you are still getting unusually low speeds downloading one of those, then you know it's not a seed problem. ![]() Check and download one of the torrents there. To start troubleshooting, try downloading a legit/legal torrent like a linux distro. It might be an issue with port forwarding, but not as likely as something else. It's also possible that your ISP is throttling torrent traffic. Most likely reason is very few seeds or low speed seeds. There's several reasons for getting slow speeds while downloading torrents. ![]()
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