
Tonight, the uPlay service from Ubisoft was hacked by a group of Russian hackers. They got access to free download of games from the service ... including Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon, which was not officially released yet (the game was supposed to be released on May 1 of this year).
This hack, which was developed for quite some time on the well-known cs.rin.ru forum, made uPlay think that the user already owns certain games, which naturally made it possible to download them for free. But not only this contributed to the leakage of the game before the release. For some reason, it turned out to be uploaded to the Ubisoft server almost a month before the game was released (the installer’s build dates back to April 4). It was this leak that caused the video of the half-hour gameplay of Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon to appear on the network and a live stream was launched.
This is of course bad news for Ubisoft, which has not yet planned to actively demonstrate Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon.
At this feats of our compatriots are not over: now you can play games offline bypassing DRM. Recall how Ubisoft firmly took up more repressive measures to prevent piracy, although it recently stated that it wants to restore relations with affected players.
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The original frame presented below proves the authenticity of the hacking service Ubisoft. As you can see, the project will take 3 GB of memory on the hard disk.

The game has already appeared on many torrent trackers, completely localized in Russian. She herself is a banter. Shows the future, how we saw it in the era of videotapes. Outside 2007, you are Sergeant Rex Colt, a cyborg commando who fights with an army of rebel machines. Your task is to find the girl, kill the villains and save the world. The game has a full set of cliché era VHS. Cyborg, dragons, mutants and Mackle Bean himself are waiting for you.
PS The topic of the game and hacking tools has already been hidden on the cs.rin.ru forum, and the gameplay video of the game is being actively removed on youtube.




Upd: Game Informer staff managed to get a comment from Ubisoft: “We are aware of the problem and are working on a solution. No personal data has been compromised. The Uplay PC gaming download service is disabled and will not be available until the problem is resolved, but all other Uplay features remain available. ”