The world ofOutridershas excited many since the release of the demo on February 25. With the title navigating a delay in early 2021, many were eagerly anticipating diving into the title today, only to be foiled by an always-online DRM mechanic in place ofDenuvo.

Titles that require an active internet connection have been the bane of many gamers for the past decade, beginning with Ubisoft’sAssassin’s Creed 2. The mechanic acts as a form of DRM (digital rights management) that can make titles difficult to pirate, although it is in no way a failsafe. People Can Fly proudly claimedOutriderswouldn’t use Denuvo, but it turns out the alternative could be more frustrating for players.

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The newly releasedOutridershas been frustrating players with the always-online requirement, as the servers have been consistently crashing as players attempt to load up the game. When the servers crash, the game cannot be played any further, requiring players to back completely out of the application. On PC, gamers need to Alt+F4 in order to escape from the title; no other means will work. This means that, for longer missions, some players could be stuck indefinitely until eitherPeople Can Flycan right its servers, or the studio opts to remove the requirement.

The frustrations have been reported from every platform, and there’s no way around it at the moment aside from waiting. As the servers are likely being swarmed with requests to connect on launch day, the capacity has likely been struck, leaving People Can Fly in a difficult position. The studio can invest toincrease server capacity, yet the servers likely will never be as crowded as they are on launch day. Alternatively, they can hope the tide of new players arriving to the title will slow down enough to mitigate this problem on its own and take the backlash on the proverbial chin.

Outridersis available for PC, PS4, PS5, Stadia, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X.

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