[ SCENE_GROUP ]
CORiSO
// classification: warez release group
About CORiSO
IDENTITY
CORiSO is an obscure anonymous PC Scene or warez release tag with a very limited public footprint in modern tracking databases. Unlike historically documented groups such as CODEX, RELOADED, or Razor1911, CORiSO does not appear to have a large, well-preserved release history, public NFO archive presence, or widely discussed role in major PC cracking milestones.[1][2]
The group is not known as a specialist in Denuvo-protected games, nor is it connected to the modern Hypervisor-based bypass scene. Its available public record points instead to a small or possibly legacy Scene entry, with one visible tracked game entry and very little supporting discussion across major release databases, CrackWatch-style communities, or gaming news coverage.[1][2]
Because of that, CORiSO should be treated as a minor or poorly documented release tag rather than a major historical group. Its value for a wiki-style database is mostly archival: it helps preserve a name that appears in crack-status tracking, even if the available public evidence is too thin to build the kind of broad profile possible for larger groups.[1]
ORIGIN
CORiSO’s origin is not well documented in public sources. Available tracking data lists CORiSO as a warez release group and shows a last active date of January 10, 2004, but there is no strong public record explaining who founded the group, what country or Scene network it came from, or whether it belonged to a wider family of release tags.[1]
The only clearly visible tracked release currently associated with CORiSO is Everwind in the available CrackWatch-style group profile.[1] That entry is unusual because the same game’s current Steam page lists Everwind as a much newer Early Access survival RPG from Enjoy Studio S.A. and Bohemia Interactive, creating a timeline mismatch between the old CORiSO date and the modern game listing.[2]
For that reason, the safest interpretation is that CORiSO is either a legacy group with a sparse archival record, a tag attached to an older or differently mapped title, or a database entry that needs manual verification before being treated as a major confirmed release history. No reliable English-language gaming news coverage appears to document CORiSO as a major cracking group, and no broad release catalog comparable to larger Scene names is easily available.[1][2]
NOTABLE OPS
- [*]Appears in public crack-status tracking as a warez release group with a last active date listed as January 10, 2004.[1]
- [*]Has one visible tracked game entry in the available database, tied to Everwind.[1]
- [*]Does not appear to have a widely documented catalog of major AAA releases, Denuvo cracks, or modern bypass releases.[1][2]
- [*]Has no clear public connection to major Scene-era groups such as CODEX, RELOADED, Razor1911, RUNE, TENOKE, or FLT based on currently visible sources.[1]
- [*]Is best classified as a minor, obscure, or poorly preserved release tag rather than a major Scene institution.[1]
MODUS OPERANDI
CORiSO’s modus operandi cannot be described in the same depth as larger Scene groups because the public record is extremely limited. There are no widely available NFO discussions, interviews, release notes, or archived disputes that explain the group’s methods, tools, internal structure, or technical specialty.[1]
Based on the available data, CORiSO appears closer to a small legacy release tag than to a modern anti-tamper research name. It is not publicly associated with Denuvo cracking, system-level bypass work, store emulator development, or a high-volume release pipeline. The visible footprint suggests a release-first identity with little or no public-facing communication.[1][2]
The timeline mismatch around Everwind also makes the group difficult to classify cleanly. Since the modern Steam listing for Everwind belongs to a 2026 Early Access title, while the CORiSO profile lists activity in 2004, the entry should be treated carefully until supported by another independent release database or archived NFO source.[1][2]
PUBLIC STANCE
CORiSO has no known public stance, manifesto, controversy, retirement note, donation model, or ideological record. Unlike EMPRESS, CPY, CODEX, or STEAMPUNKS, the tag is not associated with public arguments about DRM, ownership, preservation, proper cracks, or Scene politics.[1]
The absence of public statements makes CORiSO a purely archival entry. It does not represent a known anti-DRM movement, a major cracking methodology, or a public debate inside the Scene. Its profile should therefore remain concise, factual, and careful, focusing only on what can be verified from available tracking data.[1][2]
In a broader wiki context, CORiSO is useful mainly as an example of how many Scene or P2P tags exist with little surviving public documentation. Some groups become historically important because of major releases, public controversies, or technical breakthroughs. CORiSO, at least from currently visible sources, appears to belong to the opposite category: a name preserved by a tracker, but not yet supported by enough evidence to treat as a major actor in PC DRM history.[1]
// last_indexed: 2026-05-19
1
Jan 10, 2004
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