Free game worth downloading! [message #188342] |
Fri, 03 February 2006 17:35 |
|
I was looking for game demos and stumbled upon this cool game. It has awesome graphics (for a free game) and many cool features. You can maky your own skins ingame and paint anything you want on your car. There is also a map editor included. Ive played it for about 10 min and im already addicted!
Edit: sorry forgot the link! http://www.gamerevolution.com/download/pc/trackmania_nations
HORQWER wrote on Tue, 18 September 2007 20:47 | this is not a real renegade forums ,some one made it up
|
Renegade Forums - Official Drama Perpetuator.
[Updated on: Fri, 03 February 2006 17:36] Report message to a moderator
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Re: Free game worth downloading! [message #188463 is a reply to message #188457] |
Sun, 05 February 2006 00:57 |
Kanezor
Messages: 855 Registered: February 2005 Location: Sugar Land, TX, USA
Karma: 0
|
Colonel |
|
|
Dr. Lithius wrote on Sun, 05 February 2006 00:52 | Why would this completely free full version of a TrackMania game have StarForce Piracy Protection on it if it's free?
|
Just because it's free doesn't mean that it doesn't use things in it which are worth protecting. Without protection, it would expose it to crackers very easily disassembling it and locating ways to cheat in-game. A very prominent example of this that you should understand would be RenGuard: it's free and it's protected.
JRPereira wrote on Sun, 05 February 2006 02:37 |
Dr. Lithius wrote on Sun, 05 February 2006 01:52 | Why would this completely free full version of a TrackMania game have StarForce Piracy Protection on it if it's free?
| My guess is that it's quicker to include it rather than to remove the requirement for the demo.
|
Not necessarily. I've never used StarForce's protection so I don't know exactly how it's implemented in the protected-program's source code. But, if the authors of StarForce are halfway intelligent, then they'd likely allow the protection be able to be easily disabled for certain builds (eg, the demo) via a simple #define in the compiler.
That doesn't mean that the authors of TrackMania would to compile the demo without StarForce protection -- I would be willing to bet that the internals of the full version of TrackMania are either exactly the same as or very similar to the demo (just like most other programs with different levels of authorization). So if it's unprotected, then all you'd have to do is look at the demo in a disassembler to get (at the very least) a general idea of how it works. If such is the case, then the authors of TrackMania would have compromised the security of the full version by not protecting the demo version.
---
|
|
|