Thursday, 26 December 2024
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Changing PC Hardware Too Often Can Lock You Out of Origin Games, EA Confirms

Added: 28.03.2015 17:27 | 4 views | 0 comments


If you're benchmarking different while running a graphics performance test using different graphics cards.

After using a "handful" of graphics cards, he received a notification from Origin that too many computers have accessed his account's version of Battlefield Hardline. Hagedoorn thought that this was a new kind of digital rights management software associated with Battlefield Hardline, but Electronic Arts has since released a statement that this is a part of Origin in general.

"Origin authentication allows players to install a game on up to five different PCs every 24 hours," Electronic Arts said in a statement. "Players looking to benchmark more than five hardware configurations in one 24 hour period can contact our Customer Support team who can help."

It's not going to be an issue for most players, but at least now you know that if you're going to be testing a lot of new PC hardware components, you'll need to contact EA's Customer Support team first.

From: www.gamespot.com

Changing PC Hardware Too Often Can Lock You Out of Origin Games, EA Confirms

Added: 28.03.2015 17:27 | 4 views | 0 comments


If you're benchmarking different while running a graphics performance test using different graphics cards.

After using a "handful" of graphics cards, he received a notification from Origin that too many computers have accessed his account's version of Battlefield Hardline. Hagedoorn thought that this was a new kind of digital rights management software associated with Battlefield Hardline, but Electronic Arts has since released a statement that this is a part of Origin in general.

"Origin authentication allows players to install a game on up to five different PCs every 24 hours," Electronic Arts said in a statement. "Players looking to benchmark more than five hardware configurations in one 24 hour period can contact our Customer Support team who can help."

It's not going to be an issue for most players, but at least now you know that if you're going to be testing a lot of new PC hardware components, you'll need to contact EA's Customer Support team first.

From: www.gamespot.com


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