Good Old Games' Guillaume Rambourg on DRM and Piracy

After attending the London Games Conference, GamesIndustry.biz is offering up the results of a keynote speech on DRM and piracy given by Good Old Games' Guillaume Rambourg. In short, Mr. Rambourg delivered a hard-hitting and spot-on analysis (that even delves into the regional pricing nightmare that plagues other digital retailers) that's worthy of applause:
"Your customers hate DRM," he said, speaking at the London Games Conference. "DRM is making companies feel safe while they handle some business, they are trying to protect their product and protect their sales, but the reality is very different.

"The reality is DRM does not protect your content. Every game is pirated within a few hours of release or more often before it's released. DRM is not protecting your product or your sales, it's going to harm your sales in the long run."

"By putting DRM in your games you are working against your consumers, you are harming those you should cherish. It's only hurting your loyal consumers which is counter-productive."

Rambourg argued that the piracy industry understands digital distribution better than some games publishers, and that companies should look towards it for examples of how to better serve customers.

"There is one industry that got everything right - piracy. Piracy quickly understood that digital needs to be simple and easy. That digital consumers are expecting a fast and easy experience. You should treat piracy as competition not as an enemy. If you treat it as an enemy you are blinded and you don't pay attention to what they are doing right."

DRM measures are too complex, there's no reward in applying it, and consumers will go elsewhere for their games, said Rambourg.

"You have to be as close to piracy as possible for ease of use for the consumers. Make it simple for them and you can turn the consumers to loyal fans. Protect your brands not your sales.

"DRM free works and we know it. You have to create some emotional attachment. We bundle games with wallpapers, soundtracks, manuals, and it doesn't take a lot of your time and it makes consumers happy.

"Many companies are fans of regional pricing. On GoG we say that any consumer, regardless of his location, should have access to the product at the same price," he added. "If you don't create an emotional attachment with your consumers they are free to buy a game one day and then the next day go to the competition."
At least one company gets it. And you know what else they get? My money.