As mentioned recently in our Ensuring Fair Play article, we want to continue improving our anti-cheat solutions and more accurately detect foul play across the Rust Belt.
Following a positive rollout in THE FINALS, Denuvo Anti-Cheat will also come to ARC Raiders starting May 19th, initially to a limited player pool, with plans to expand after close monitoring.
We will not be using Denuvo’s Digital Rights Management (DRM) service, and are working to ensure minimal impact on performance.
With Denuvo Anti-Cheat and Anybrain, we are working to strengthen ARC Raiders’ systems even further. Keep sending us reports of any information that you believe might help us do so, it’s highly appreciated.


For PC gaming news and discussion. PCGamingWiki
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The Finals is the game I spend the most time in, I havent noticed issues in performance and honestly didnt know about denuvo being there until now.
Still not stoked to hear they are getting business from embark though.
Will the game still work on Linux?
Its user space so it works fine.
Considering The Finals does, I would be surprised if they implemented it in Arc Raiders in a different way that broke Linux installs.
I’m less worried about the technical implementation and how it works, than if they just decide to not support it. Sometimes the technical side could work, but they make decision to not support Linux.
So does that mean you cant play arc on linux anymore?
They already did the same thing in The Finals, and they just use an anti cheat in user space for Linux users. All is good in the hood.
The article mentioned that they did the same thing with The Finals, and that game has reports on protondb saying it’s working fine as recently as two days ago.
I’m hopeful this won’t be a problem based on that, but I don’t know for sure.
I think generally it’s compatible with proton and Linux but still I’m not a fan of Denuvo so I’m not about to find out since I’ve already kind of fell out of the game.
Isn’t this an online only game? What’s the point of Denuvo in such situation?
This is an anti-cheat, separate from the DRM that we all know and hate. I’m not sure exactly how it works, but it seems similar to EAC where it’s kernel level on windows but still works on Linux
Oh, you are right! I skipped the Denuvo anti cheat part.
Anti-cheat, not DRM. Two different products from the same company.
Yes, I stand corrected, haven’t read the anti cheat part, my bad.