![]() It has remembered my password this time, but hasn't auto-signed me in like I told it to. Windows live pops up and asks me to sign in.Windows live tells me there's an update, tells me I can't play until it's updated.It hasn't remembered my password, despite being told to. I quit and then some install process runs.Games for Windows live tells me there's an update.Then it makes me enter my CD key (AGAIN!). Games for Windows live asks me to sign in and accepts my existing details.Realise I already have a Microsoft passport thing, let's use that instead. It tells me to create an account, which boots me out of BioShock and into Internet Explorer (not even my default browser). At which point a big "Games for Windows live" browser appears at the top of the screen. ![]() This is marketing speak for asking some remote server which may disappear at any point for permission to play the game I legally own. What appears instead is an ugly Windows dialogue box telling me to enter my CD code so something called SecureROM can "activate" my copy. The whole point of CD codes was to stop me from copying the CD. Steam pops up and tells me "this is a CD code you'll need to enter". ![]()
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