Overview
Crimson Desert uses Denuvo anti-tamper software on the PC version (Steam and Epic Games Store). Pearl Abyss updated the game's Steam store page on March 12, 2026, to include the Denuvo DRM notice, seven days before the March 19 launch date. The late disclosure prompted significant community pushback, with some players cancelling their pre-orders.
Timeline
Crimson Desert was available for pre-order on Steam for several weeks before the Denuvo listing appeared. On Thursday, March 12, the store page was quietly updated to add an alert about third-party DRM. Players noticed the change the same day, and it spread across Reddit, Steam discussion forums, and social media within hours.
A prominent thread on the game's Steam discussion tab titled "DENUVO = preorder instantly aggressively cancelled!!!" collected over 65 comments from frustrated players. The backlash centered on two issues: potential performance impact from kernel-level DRM, and the perception that Pearl Abyss had hidden this information until it was too late for many buyers to reconsider.
Pearl Abyss response
Pearl Abyss responded to the controversy directly. The studio stated that all performance benchmarks, specification videos, and Digital Foundry analyses were captured with the same Denuvo implementation shipping in the launch build. According to Pearl Abyss: "The benchmark videos and performance specs we released were all created with the exact same implementation of Denuvo that is in the launch build. This includes the performance videos by Digital Foundry. It's important that reviewers and benchmarkers' experience with the game is ultimately representative of the final consumer's experience."
What Denuvo does
Denuvo is a digital rights management (DRM) solution developed by Denuvo Software Solutions (a subsidiary of Irdeto). It is designed to prevent unauthorized copying and distribution of PC games. The software encrypts portions of the game executable and performs periodic online checks to verify the user owns a legitimate copy.
Denuvo has been controversial in PC gaming for years. Critics argue it adds CPU overhead, increases load times, and requires periodic internet connectivity even for single-player games. Defenders point out that modern implementations have minimal performance impact when properly integrated. Several major publishers have removed Denuvo from games months after launch once the initial piracy window has passed.
Impact on offline play
Crimson Desert requires an internet connection for initial setup and a mandatory Day 1 patch. After completing the setup, offline play is supported. The Denuvo implementation requires periodic re-verification, which means extended offline play beyond a certain window (typically several days to weeks, depending on the implementation) may require a brief internet check.