Yes but on day 31 after the servers are not working you have no Trainz, this is the point.
N3V may have good intentions but what if a competitor takes over, N3V would have no say in the matter.
Ken
I've been using Trainz for over 8 years, this rubbish over N3V folding up has been going on every flipping year, it has not happened it probably won't happen and both Tony H and Windwalkr have stated that in the event of the unlikely event happening they would fix it so you can carry on playing. Yes Auran went bankrupt over a non related to Trainz game, did that stop Trainz? no it did not. Pure paranoia, much the same as has infected the UK over the Brexit fiasco.
Competitor take over? N3V is not multibillion dollar company, it's a tiny software company and I've never heard of a hostile takeover of a small independent game company, mergers maybe but not hostile ones! anyway taking over a company to disable it's software and alienate / loose its customers and income, that would be a very stupid move. Need to stop this paranoia over what could happen, do you refuse to leave the house because you could get run over by a bus? of course not but it could happen.
Microsoft could abandon the desktop disable Windows as we know it and go for a cloud only OS, then none of our software would work, which is another Myth circulating on the net in lesser informed quarters.
To be honest, once every 30 days is a better option than every time you start the game as in permanent Internet connection required, which you will get with some companies.
If you want to avoid DRM on a Railway Simulator then you have Open Rails / MSTS. Every thing commercial now has some form of DRM and likewise could using your arguments be taken over and shut down. Steam was developed as a DRM fix to leaked Half-Life Betas and not as was claimed a software distribution platform, I was a tester for Valve at the time. Like all DRM though, it still hasn't solved the problem just makes it harder for the Darkside to circumvent.
When I used to repair PCs, a good 50% of the ones that arrived for repair were using pirated copies of Windows, Office, Photoshop etc etc and people wonder why there is a need for DRM or at least some form of protection of Intellectual Property.
I don't like DRM but I can reluctantly understand why there is a need for it and have accepted it as a necessary evil, It won't solve the piracy issues, however will make it a lot harder for them, especially if activation is done online and not via a serial number.
Don't suppose many if any on here remember the horrible parallel port dongles that Companies like Lightwave and 3DS used to use, however the same protection could be achieved with a USB one, which is the only workable alternative I could come up with and is used in the commercial world.