Their presence is intended to prevent crackers from using demo executables to help break retail executables (as the two will usually be quite similar).Ĭurrently (May 2014) the use of StarForce solutions became much easier for end users due to 'driverless' security technology and binding to a computer. StarForce 3.0 drivers are installed with certain older game demos, freeware and downloadable games, like TrackMania Nations. Colin McRae: DIRT, however, both asks the player for permission to install the drivers and includes a help file with information on how to remove them. StarForce 3.0 has received criticism for installing its own device driver onto computers along with the protected product, which is generally not uninstalled along with the software ( Peter Jackson's King Kong being one exception). Alongside many technical details, it revealed how several resource-intensive procedures were implemented, such as virtual file system and functions protected within a complex virtual machine. In March 2006 the warez group RELOADED released a vast array of documentation about how StarForce 3 works. It also marked a significant step up in the effort required to reverse engineer it. When StarForce 3.0 was released, it initially provided extremely strong protection – the StarForce 3.0-protected game Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory was uncracked for 422 days.