![]() Huzzah.Īs as aside, I may try reaching out to EA and Sony DADC to get this sorted one way or another. Why the Origin download uses the date checking version when they have one that runs fine is beyond me, but at least I got it working without piracy. exe is patched to a certain extent and includes all the DLC, but more importantly. Direct from an EA server.ĭownload, pop it in the Dead Space 2 folder, play the game that you bought. You can't authenticate from a server that don't real or done borked. The "fix" varies from place to place, everything from using safe mode with networking to disabling WMI and praying. Which sounds a lot like a certain piece of malware when you think about it. exe itself has been modified to run the date check the first time you run it, if it's successful it will download the key and decrypt the game. But the second you try to run it? Date check, s'il vous plaît. You can download the game and install it. No, it doesn't make sense.Īll over the internet, people are talking about this. ![]() The Origin download version ALSO does the date check. In addition, it doesn't just apply to the disk version. The exact thing it was implemented to prevent. Not only does the authentication server appear to be offline, though it's impossible to actually check, there is no way to bypass it without piracy. It makes sense.ĭead Space 2 was released on January 28th 2011. ![]() You need to make sure the game isn't leaked before release, I get that. The disks are probably still the same ones that were created when the game went gold. ![]() The physical retail edition of Dead Space 2, somewhat understandably, includes a secuROM release date check provided by Sony DADC. I was even considering the DLC, I do like the witness rig. So much so, that I ordered the boxed retail copies of Dead Space 2 and 3 after only playing around 3 hours of the first one. I've only recently started playing it and I'm really feeling it. Especially so, when the last game in the series has a boat-load of DLC and microtransactions. The official reason being that EA wanted to give back to gamers, though the cynic in me thinks it's just to get people hooked into a series. Back in March of 2014 EA offered 2008's Sci-Fi survival horror game Dead Space for free to anyone who wanted it through their Origin "On the House" promotion. ![]()
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