📰 Full Story
IO Interactive added Denuvo anti-tamper DRM to its upcoming James Bond game 007 First Light just six days before the title’s May 27, 2026 release, prompting a wave of pre-order cancellations and refund requests across Steam.
Reports and forum posts dated May 21–22 show frustrated buyers citing performance concerns, mandatory online authentication and the risk of losing access if servers go offline.
The late disclosure follows a recent pattern — critics note similar last-minute Denuvo additions on titles such as Crimson Desert and Lego Batman — and has reignited calls for Valve to require publishers to disclose DRM before accepting pre-orders.
Analysts and players point out that Denuvo’s impact varies by game (some tests showed marginal framerate effects in Resident Evil Requiem), while others warn of longer load times, kernel-level access and compatibility issues on devices like the Steam Deck.
With pre-orders for 007 First Light open since September 2025, many say the timing of the announcement looks intentional to avoid depressing early sales.
The developer’s decision and community reaction will be watched as a bellwether for publisher transparency and DRM policy in the games industry.







💬 Commentary