The site functioned as an aggregator. It didn't necessarily create the cracks itself (that was the job of the cracking groups), but it hosted the files and provided a simple, searchable frontend. Users could search for "The Sims 2," "Grand Theft Auto: Vice City," or "Age of Empires II," and find the specific fixed .exe file they needed.
Enter the "No-CD Crack."
While seemingly logical, this was a nightmare for consumers. It forced users to dig out CDs, swap them constantly if they played multiple games, and suffer from performance issues as the game streamed data from slower optical drives. Furthermore, laptop gamers—a growing demographic—found it cumbersome to carry a library of discs just to play a game on the go. gameburnworld.com cracks