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翻訳の問題を報告
I prefer buying DRM-Free games from GOG, Itch, etc. when ever it is possible. While Steam is not on the same level of DRM as Denuvo or Uplay, it is still a DRM regardless in the sense that an initial activation of the client after a fresh Windows installation is necessary in order to play the games you've purchased.
My Steam game directory is on my E: drive, so when I format Windows, install and activate Steam, I just point to my E:\Steam directory and and that's the end of it. I'm just trying to figure out a solution of a scenario where I would have no Internet access for a while or Steam services would be offline for a while and I would need to do a fresh install of Windows for whatever reason.
Seems like a You problem.
Regarding the topic at hand, no there isn't a way to do what you are wanting through registry.
Guess I'll keep looking. Also, I never claimed that Steam had some sort of problem, it's working the way it was intended. I think it's obvious from my posts that this is something personal that I'm trying to achieve.
I disagrees. If you activated Steam once on your computer and just want to back-up that activation, then it's not circumventing anything. It's no different than making an image of my SSD and restoring it, Steam remains activated.
https://support.steampowered.com/kb_article.php?ref=7418-YUBN-8129
It's very uncommon that the steam services will be offline for an extended period (more than a couple of hours). And once you get that initial "OK" from Steam, you can play the games offline for a while (I think a couple of months? Didn't really test the length) -- you don't need a constantly online connection.
Should be indefinitely.
cSg|mc-Hotsauce is right, I don't think there's any limit since I did some tests with my computer clock and Steam didn't really care, I just couldn't play games with extra DRM.
https://steamcommunity.com/discussions/forum/0/3006676913246462740/
Where I linked a Valve employee response where it is supposed to be indefinite.
And you still don't "activate" Steam. You sign into your account.
Any game you buy that requires Steam comes with a disclaimer "internet connection needed on installation" for a reason. It's an online service.
And no, you are not looking for a "solution" to a unlikely scenario. You are asking how to break Steam's DRM. On Steam's own forums.
Which is largely because your computer clock - or rather your OS clock - has no bearing on it. Because it would be stupid to base DRM around something the user has control over.
And you still don't understand my initial topic, go back and read until you do.
Well you're certainly entitled to your opinion.
Please do enlighten me. How would any program would know what to based itself on other than my computer's clock if it doesn't have access to the Internet or it's own clock and calendar?
Nice, thanks
Indeed. You'd be using your own account, just at a former state in time.
I haven't ever tried what you've proposed, but you may also want to check the user data folders for stuff there, in case your idea doesn't work.