When you’re done, set it back to Enabled and everything is as it always was.Many who took issue with my statement about the superiority of the PlayStation 3 version did so for two primary reasons: save importation from the original Mass Effect, possible only on the PC and Xbox 360, and stunning visual fidelity that can only be attained on PC. Set that to Disabled for the duration of ME3. The second option from the top is Internet Connection. Head over to the far left and choose Settings – Network Settings. No matter if you’re using a wired or wireless connection, the procedure is the same. I’m more of a “sit in a chair and never get up” kind of guy, so I opted instead to disable it in the PS3 settings. I’ve read that some users physically took their network cable out of their consoles, which seemed to do the trick. Without there being one, the game doesn’t check if the EA servers are operational and lets us start the single player mode just fine. Turns out all we have to do is disable the PS3’s network connection. Lucky for us, there’s a simple trick we can use to start that demo anyway! Turns out those Mass Effect 3 demo servers have been switched off many years ago, and the game is obviously coded so badly that it thinks it can’t live without an answer from those servers. All I got was an error message telling me that the EA Origin or Alliance servers are down, and then the demo quits. To my surprise, the demo didn’t start up.
I had enjoyed Mass Effect 2 immensely, I own the trilogy for PC, and I wanted to take a look at how the Playstation 3 version looked. The other day I downloaded the Mass Effect 3 Demo on my old Playstation 3.