This Application Cannot Run Under A Virtual Machine - Dead Space 3 Sorry

A: No. The error is triggered because the game detects a VM. Running it inside, say, VMware Workstation will trigger the exact same error. The game requires physical hardware access.

"Sorry, this application cannot run under a virtual machine." The game requires physical hardware access

For many players, this is confusing and frustrating. You are not running a virtual machine. You are on a standard Windows 11 or Windows 10 gaming PC. So why is EA’s DRM (Digital Rights Management) or the game’s anti-tamper technology flagging your hardware as a VM? You are on a standard Windows 11 or Windows 10 gaming PC

If you are reading this, those seventeen words have likely interrupted your plans to dive back into the frozen horrors of Tau Volantis. You have launched Dead Space 3 —whether through Steam, EA App (formerly Origin), or disc—only to be met with a black screen and a pop-up error that seems to accuse you of running the game inside a virtualized environment like VMware, VirtualBox, or Hyper-V. EA App (formerly Origin)

A: Both versions contain the same DRM check. However, the EA App has more aggressive background telemetry that can sometimes exacerbate false positives.

It is 2026. Virtualization is a core component of modern computing. It is time for a patch that removes this obsolete check from Dead Space 3 permanently. Until then, PC gamers will continue to wrestle with their own BIOS settings just to play a single-player horror game.

A: No. The error is triggered because the game detects a VM. Running it inside, say, VMware Workstation will trigger the exact same error. The game requires physical hardware access.

"Sorry, this application cannot run under a virtual machine."

For many players, this is confusing and frustrating. You are not running a virtual machine. You are on a standard Windows 11 or Windows 10 gaming PC. So why is EA’s DRM (Digital Rights Management) or the game’s anti-tamper technology flagging your hardware as a VM?

If you are reading this, those seventeen words have likely interrupted your plans to dive back into the frozen horrors of Tau Volantis. You have launched Dead Space 3 —whether through Steam, EA App (formerly Origin), or disc—only to be met with a black screen and a pop-up error that seems to accuse you of running the game inside a virtualized environment like VMware, VirtualBox, or Hyper-V.

A: Both versions contain the same DRM check. However, the EA App has more aggressive background telemetry that can sometimes exacerbate false positives.

It is 2026. Virtualization is a core component of modern computing. It is time for a patch that removes this obsolete check from Dead Space 3 permanently. Until then, PC gamers will continue to wrestle with their own BIOS settings just to play a single-player horror game.