For the past couple months, a lot of publishers were able to secure their PC games by using the latest version of the Denuvo anti-tamper tech. And while it has taken crackers a while, it appears that this latest version, which is now called Denuvo 6.0, has been cracked.

Earlier yesterday, a specific game cracking group was able to crack the latest version of Total War: Three Kingdoms. Total War: Three Kingdoms was updated one week ago to version 1.1.0 (which could mean that it has the latest version of Denuvo) and… as you may have guessed… the cracked version is based on version 1.1.0.

It will be interesting to see now whether SEGA will remove Denuvo from its game (this seems unlikely as the previous Total War games are still using it) and whether other publishers – like Bethesda has removed Denuvo from its cracked games in the past – will remove this controversial anti-tamper tech from their games.

It’s also interesting noting that this specific game cracking group claimed a while back that Denuvo was dead, meaning that it may have found a way to crack all of the Denuvo games (whether they are using an older or a newer version of it). Whether this is actually true remains to be seen as there are currently numerous games, using the latest version of Denuvo, that have not been cracked yet.

As always, we won’t allow links to pirated content and those that share such links will be banned (so yeah, don’t link to anything suspicious).