Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

James Bond fans are bailing on 007 First Light after IO Interactive pulls a classic villain move

James Bond fans are canceling pre-orders faster than Q can build a gadget.

Add as a preferred source on Google
James Bond smirks in 007: First Light.
Io Interactive

The James Bond gaming comeback just hit a speed bump. Six days before the May 27th release of 007 First Light, a Denuvo (a controversial anti-tamper software) DRM disclaimer quietly appeared on its Steam listing. Many fans who had pre-ordered the game found this reason enough to cancel.

This isn’t an isolated incident. Publishers have made a habit of adding Denuvo close to launch. Crimson Desert did the same thing in March, giving players almost no warning, which led to significant backlash. IO Interactive is even worse, giving buyers only a six-day notice.

Should you be worried about performance?

It depends on who you ask. Denuvo’s impact on performance varies from game to game. According to Notebookcheck, marginal frame rate differences were detected in Resident Evil Requiem after its Denuvo implementation was analyzed.

Recommended Videos

Gamers also report that games with Denuvo often take much longer to load. Also, even if you are playing a single-player game, it requires an online connection to verify the game, which is, to say the least, very annoying.

007 First Light already raised eyebrows when its system requirements recommended 32GB of RAM for 1080p 60 FPS gaming, so concerns about additional performance overhead are fair. The developers later retracted this and lowered the requirement to just 16GB.

There’s also worry about long-term accessibility and the game’s server authentication requirements. These are valid concerns, especially for a title you are spending full price on.

Is Valve doing enough?

Gamers on Reddit and the Steam forums are not taking this quietly. Gamers are petitioning Valve to require publishers to disclose Denuvo before accepting pre-orders, similar to ongoing complaints about undisclosed generative AI assets in games.

Whether IO Interactive addresses these concerns before launch remains to be seen. If gaming companies should learn anything from the past, it’s that this behavior will turn away even the staunchest of supporters.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over seven years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
GeForce Now just got Forza Horizon 6 and Disco Elysium’s weird new cousin
Nvidia just added the hottest racing game and Disco Elysium’s spiritual successor to GeForce Now
Forza

GeForce Now is having a pretty good week if you have a very diverse palette for games. From next-gen visuals in racing to a narrative-driven RPG, Nvidia has a great set of games for you to try out. The company's latest cloud gaming update brings Forza Horizon 6 alongside Zero Parades: For Dead Spies, the new RPG from ZA/UM, the studio behind the critically acclaimed Disco Elysium.

Forza Horizon 6 hits GeForce Now

Read more
Destiny 2 is finally riding into the sunset after nearly 12 years
Bungie says goodbye to Destiny 2 live-service content after The Final Shape
Characters shooting in Destiny 2.

Destiny 2’s live-service journey is coming to an end, closing out one of the longest-running and most influential eras in modern online gaming. In a message to players, Bungie confirmed that it will release the final live-service content update for Destiny 2 on June 9, 2026. The studio described the decision as the studio moves to a "new beginning", with the focus now shifting to incubating new games.

Is Destiny 2 finally dying?

Read more
Ubisoft wants a comeback with Assassin’s Creed, Far Cry, Ghost Recon, and one AI experiment that has players worried
Ubisoft’s first playable gen-AI project is coming, and gamers are already skeptical
Ubisoft Vantage Studios Games

Ubisoft is trying to rebuild momentum. It is banking on its biggest franchises for this comeback, as revealed in its latest earnings report. But the French publisher/studio isn't just relying on the familiar names and is even bringing generative AI as the next experience.

According to Ubisoft’s FY2025-26 earnings report, the company expects a much stronger content pipeline across FY2027-28 and FY2028-29, with releases tied to major brands including Assassin’s Creed, Far Cry, and Ghost Recon.

Read more