Crytek, the German developer of
Crysis, has said that it will not produce another PC-exclusive title because of the high levels of piracy it experienced with Crysis.
Cevat Yerli, Crytek's CEO, said in an interview:
"We are suffering currently from the huge piracy that is encompassing Crysis. We seem to lead the charts in piracy by a large margin, a chart leading that is not desirable. I believe that’s the core problem of PC Gaming, piracy. To the degree PC Gamers that pirate games inherently destroy the platform. Similar games on consoles sell factors of 4-5 more. It was a big lesson for us and I believe we wont have PC exclusives as we did with Crysis in future. We are going to support PC, but not exclusive any more."
Where this leaves the future of
Crysis is unclear. Crytek has said that the game is planned as the first part of a trilogy, but of the possibility of bringing the first game to console Yerli said, "
Crysis as we have seen is impossible.
Crysis would have to be largely changed to bring it to Xbox 360 or Playstation 3."
Given that Yerli has said that Crytek will no longer make PC-exclusive games, it would seem that for any sequels to
Crysis the developer will have to severely compromise the series' quality to get it onto console.
Yerli also criticised Microsoft's support of Games for Windows. When told that the service's official site features "no trailers, no demos. Only a few screenshots and a link to a Fileplanet beta (
Crysis-related) which is closed now for a long, long time", he said, "What you describe, if still the case, is of course not desirable and acceptable".
It wasn't all doom and gloom for the service, however. Yerli went on to say, "However I believe in the serious intentions of Microsoft in PC Gaming through the Games for Windows initiative."
You can read more about
Crysis on SPOnG's
dedicated game page.
Source: PC Play