![]() And if this tool is for players to use, dishonest users will just ignore it in this format, because there's no recourse. Without it though I guess it's just a rule you got to respect as a modder, without any practical purpose.Īnd no I didn't refer to dishonest modders (didn't even occur to me), there are probably very few of them anyway, since it's so easy to buy the game nowadays. Ah, that's kind of what i suspected, yeah with installer it would at least make sense. From an honest onlooker's perspective it just looks weird as hell.Įärendil_Ardamírë. I have a clear conscience - kind of the reason I'm asking in the first place. You can't actually force someone to use it, especially pirates, because they don't give a hoot, defeating the purpose. Is it just something you're forced to have as part of your mod because Taleworlds' rules says so, regardless of whether it's dumb or not? Just a formality no one really cares about? What is going on here?ĭoDoCat. If you assume bad faith from a player, what on earth can you do to them to punish or force to comply? Why would a pirate voluntarily submit to this? What actual power does this tool possess? If you assume good faith, than why do you need it in the first place? Either way, it seems to have no practical use at all, at least to me. This concept is utterly incomprehensible to me, and I say it without any anger or ire towards Taleworlds or mod creator. It's not as if anything is encrypted and forces me to provide the serial key to unlock it. If i didn't bother to check on the mod page recently, almost by chance, I would miss introduction of this feature entirely, at least for some time (possibly a lot of time), blissfully ignorant of it's existence. I downloaded the mod before this verifier was introduced and played for some time, so what is supposed to force me to use it if I don't want to? I already have the mod. I know it's a lot of text on possibly something quite mundane, but I really don't get it, so pelase bear with me. If they know they can't pass, how can you force them to use it and give themselves away?Īnd what happens if i use this verifier and my code fails? Will it actually somehow affect my game? How? In what way? My key is steam-verified, because i bought it there, it's protected by default. If one assumes the opposite, why would that person even bother to download this verifier in the first place, much less use it? What forces them to do it, instead of just ignoring and playing the mod? They'd know they either can't pass it or would cheat with a keygen tool or something like that (not sure if it'd work, but who knows). If you bought the game and played NP multiplayer, than it works - the serial was already checked, or you couldn't play (unless this verifier makes a mistake I guess). ![]() If one assumes that user is honest, than this verifier is redundant, because it's definitely going to verify. Maybe it's the language barrier, but i haven't encountered anything like this ever. ![]() ![]() No seriously, either I'm dumb or this makes 0 sense. ![]() Ok, am I the only one who doesn't quite get it? What is the actual, practical purpose of this? To voluntarily check our own serial keys? Why? Let's assume we're pirates or something and just ignore it, what's going to happen than? What is the potential recourse intended? How can someone possibly punish a bad mod user this way? Why would dishonest people check themselves, knowing they are dishonest? How is this supposed to work with user modifications, unless it's embedded into an installer or something? ![]()
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