Monster Hunter World no longer uses Denuvo on PC.
Capcom has concluded that Denuvo, the counter-robbery DRM, has done what’s necessary for Monster Hunter World. In an update delivered earlier today, Denuvo was removed from the game’s Steam rendition.
In spite of the fact that the fix was declared early, Capcom didn’t indicate Denuvo’s removal. Players rather saw the altogether more modest .exe record following the fix’s delivery. This is upheld by the game’s set of experiences page on SteamDB.
Game publishers have been known to remove Denuvo from their games when it quits filling its need. Once in a while, that happens when the game gets broken, and on different occasions when an adequate significant stretch of time has passed since dispatch.
Capcom has itself been a major defender of Denuvo, having used it in a few of its significant PC discharges previously, including Resident Evil 7, Devil May Cry 5, Resident Evil 2 remake, Resident Evil 3, and more as of late, Resident Evil Village.
A large portion of those games at this point don’t utilize Denuvo, in any case. Beast Hunter World stayed with it for a long time by correlation.
The following Monster Hunter game to show up on PC will be Monster Hunter Stories 2: Wings of Ruin, which is out July 9. At that point, the large delivery after that is Monster Hunter Rise, right on time in 2022. Given Capcom’s set of experiences, Rise will probably incorporate Denuvo at launch.