I think the appeal of cracks is still there for the technically minded. Learning reverse engineering, understanding how to circumvent technologies.
That seems to be the real point for these groups. Reputation from reverse engineering. I certainly enjoyed my time writing them. I don't know of any group that does this and doesn't support the developers of the IP in question. You still end up buying the software.
As good as Steam might be, it’s still required for the games you purchased to run, and that doesn’t align with some people. You own your games on Steam as much as you own your music on Spotify. So priacy is still alive and well, and a lot of the arguments I see for it is stripping DRM and ownership.
I prefer Steam over other platforms because multiplayer is effortless, with a friend or at a LAN party that means means more time actually playing the game. But if it’s not on Steam or not everyone can afford it, we’re probably playing a cracked, portable copy.
Apparently they’ve been active again since 2010, but in my ( much older ) mind, steam has made piracy mostly obsolete.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Razor_1911?wprov=sfti1