Sir_diealot the fact is we don’t own thew game, when you purchase any game … you only purchased license (which grants you the right) to install the game on PC (one at the time) and play game, under EULA rules … So i don’t see the problem. This is same situation like with Windows OEM licences. For example you buy new PC or mobile phone, and OEM Windows OS is preinstalled and licences is bound to that specific hardware. If you change hardware like MBO or Hard drive (on which your OS is installed) you lose the right to use that license (Because regulations say you can upgrade hardware but you can’t change base hardware, except in exceptional situations such as hardware failures) Changing MBO is replacement not upgrade … So this is same type of licensing model … game is bound to hardware and can’t be be sold separately from the linked hardware, which is logical because you receive an exclusive game with it.
The only thing that could be a problem with this type of licensing model is:
- what happens when your hardware experiences a failure … Will nVidia allow you to transfer the license on new GPU?
- what happens when you buy new PC with new GPU? Or in a few years when GPU becomes obsolete? … Will nVidia allow you to transfer the license on new PC …
everything else with this licensing model is OK …