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Dead Space 3 Sorry This Application Cannot Run Under A Virtual Machine [Android]

This error does not appear on standard "vanilla" Windows Home installations or older gaming laptops. The typical victim has:

This error is a common annoyance in Dead Space 3 on PC. The game's anti-cheat/DRM software detects system features (like Hyper-V or certain BIOS settings) and incorrectly assumes you are running the game inside a virtual machine, blocking the launch.

If the steps above fail, you can manually mask VM-related strings in the Windows Registry. Back up your registry before making changes. This error does not appear on standard "vanilla"

Most modern versions of Windows enable these by default, which can trick older games.

"Sorry, This application cannot run under a Virtual Machine." If the steps above fail, you can manually

The technical means of detecting virtualization are themselves instructive. They reveal an adversarial relationship: code that probes CPU features, timing discrepancies, or hypervisor artifacts; heuristics that assume any divergence from a “native” profile indicates illegitimate intent. But as virtualization becomes more ubiquitous—cloud computing, containerization, developer sandboxes—these probes grow blunt and brittle. The binary posture of “allowed” vs “disallowed” environments collapses under the multiplicity of modern computing contexts. In attempting to police a narrow ideal of execution, the software exposes its own fragility.

Now suit up, and good luck. You’ll need it. "Sorry, This application cannot run under a Virtual Machine

Check the box for and select Windows 7 or Windows 8 .

When you run Dead Space 3 , it checks for signs of virtualization. If it finds specific flags in your BIOS/UEFI or operating system, it shuts down. This often happens even on a standard Windows PC if is enabled in the BIOS, or if Windows Hyper-V features are active.

The error is not from Dead Space 3 itself, but from (often Digital Rights Management or EA App background services). The DRM checks your system environment for signs of a virtual machine, as VM’s are commonly used to bypass copy protection or run multiple game instances.

The error indicates the game (or a component it uses) detects it’s running inside a virtual machine (VM) and refuses to run. Publishers and developers sometimes block VMs to prevent debugging, cheating, unauthorized modding, or to make reverse engineering harder. Detection can come from the game executable, a DRM/anti-tamper module, or an anti-cheat subsystem.