
I understand that basically most cpus that were released in the last 10 years have tpm 2.0, but again, some people (including me) have obscure cpus. Like I have xeon e5 2650 v2, which is not exactly the best for gaming but it gets the job done. but tpm 2.0 support is from v3 and above. This has made many games unplayable for me which is a shame, like ac shadows, dune awakening, gow ragnarok, i believe spiderman 2 also has this requirement. I just don't understand why it would be there in the first place.
12 Comments
I did not know that games required a TPM now. That’s insanity.
If a game requires TPM 2.0 it’s probably micro transaction slop anyways and not worth your time.
What game require it? Are we talking about some kind of anti-cheat?
what? ac shadows require tpm 2.0?
Can’t wait for the day when a game will only run on Ryzen 9 11300X3D and RTX9090 Super. Anything below that won’t cut it /s
Gamers: Companies should do more to stop hackers in video games, in general usage of computers and security risks.
Companies: develops and deploys exactly that (Be that kernel level anti-cheat for hackers, TPM 2.0 for general computer security etc)
Gamers:

Why des tyre pressure monitoring matter to games now?
What’s the problem here? Every single game that you just listed sucks ass.
As if those games were playable on such an old CPU with weak single threaded performance, anyway.
Stardew Valley:

I get the “anti cheat” feature of TPM 2.0. It will most likely fail horribly because they always believe they can phase out cheaters and fail every single time, but they’re trying and blocking out many people who just want to play a game but can’t.
Shame.
Some of us still rock 10+ year old computers but don’t play much new so aren’t impacted