Corruption.I don't know why G2A is advertised by the majority of top twitch streamers when it is known to be selling illegitimate keys. Even Cloud9 is sponsored by them.
Yes blame the customers for flaws in a publishers distribution network.
Yes blame the customers for flaws in a publishers distribution network.
seems to me that this is the case.maybe they are after the vpn/patch keys?
I don't know why G2A is advertised by the majority of top twitch streamers when it is known to be selling illegitimate keys. Even Cloud9 is sponsored by them.
thats not strictly true. its not 2010 where you have global keys for everyone. the keys from cheaper regions often come without english language and need either a vpn to unlock, an english language "patch" or even both. if an AAA key has native EU languages and needs no vpn bs it is a key for the eu market. if a key is really stolen it a) wont work to begin with or b) will get revoked shortly after.
this whole situation just looks very anticonsumer to me and like an empowerment to pirates.
it mabye well within ubisofts rights to do so, but im also gladly in the right not to buy anything from them in the future. (and no this doesnt mean ill pirate it, backlog for years…![]()
Yes blame the customers for flaws in a publishers distribution network.
Ubisoft or anyone else should just cancel or remove games from this point and on not games bought before because customers have no idea.
This fucking sucks. I asked lots of people online and even on this forum before buying stuff on Kinguin and everyone told me that it was legit. I had no idea they were unauthorised otherwise I wouldn't have bought anything. Ubisoft or anyone else should just cancel or remove games from this point and on not games bought before because customers have no idea.
This fucking sucks. I asked lots of people online and even on this forum before buying stuff on Kinguin and everyone told me that it was legit. I had no idea they were unauthorised otherwise I wouldn't have bought anything. Ubisoft or anyone else should just cancel or remove games from this point and on not games bought before because customers have no idea.
Sorry i don't plan to pay full price for games. If they want to stop this they need to price their games better.
There is a German saying "Dummheit schützt vor Strafe nicht" meaning: Just because you didn't know something is illegal, doesn't mean you shouldn't/can't get punished for it.
If you buy a Picasso in alleway and it turns out the seller stole it doesn't mean you can keep it.
Exactly this.If you unknowingly buy stolen goods and the real owner shows up and wants them back you don't get to keep them.
This fucking sucks. I asked lots of people online and even on this forum before buying stuff on Kinguin and everyone told me that it was legit. I had no idea they were unauthorised otherwise I wouldn't have bought anything. Ubisoft or anyone else should just cancel or remove games from this point and on not games bought before because customers have no idea.
If you buy from unauthorized sellers or the gray market, unfortunately, this is the risk you run. You see this type of thing in other industries too. For example, there is a large gray market for photography gear made by Canon. However, if you purchase from those types of sellers, Canon offers very limited, if any, support. Not exactly the same thing (as it is a physical good as opposed to digital), but the concept is similar.
Often times when you purchase something for a price below the typical market price, you run this type of risk. Is what it is.
then you should wait.
If you unknowingly buy stolen goods and the real owner shows up and wants them back you don't get to keep them.
Wait few weeks/months and it will be super cheap on legit reseller site.Sorry i don't plan to pay full price for games. If they want to stop this they need to price their games better.
You know something is up if Devolver is doing this. I only ever heard really shady things about G2A
the essence is that it won't necessarily mean more revenue for Ubi when they do this.
How is this in any way applicable here? If you have a spare key there a numerous options to sell it. Legal ones.Consumers need a way to resell digital rights.
How does that make sense?the essence is that it won't necessarily mean more revenue for Ubi when they do this.
They don't enforce it.How do they (if they even) enforce that? Do they check payment origin such as where your credit card is registered and so on? So if you buy with a U.S credit card, do they decline payment?
Nuuvem is legit. But the terms and conditions require that you live in south america, so if you buy from elsewhere then that isn't so legit.
except he has to go through legal channels to prove and enforce his ownership
Is this analogy meant to be about physical goods? Because if so it's pretty different to a copy of a digital product.If you unknowingly buy stolen goods and the real owner shows up and wants them back you don't get to keep them.
Providing a marketplace for stolen keys is obviously not cool, but I am not a big fan of condemning the entire grey market for that.
Consumers need a way to resell digital rights.
Publishers are going to cast any service that allows that as "unauthorized", but I don't care. They may try to make that word seem scary but its not.
Different ways. Like buying things and make a credit card recharge. I heard some people even asked devs for review keys just to sell them. Of course there are games that are bought just in different countries, but there is a lot of fraud and exploitation involved.How do these sites steal keys, just out of curiosity.
So what's stopping you from waiting til a price drop?Sorry i don't plan to pay full price for games. If they want to stop this they need to price their games better.
I assume it's pretty easy to prove ownership when the product is a unique product key that your company created. If someone really wanted to try and sue Ubisoft for access to the product rather than going after the key seller for selling them stolen goods they would be incredibly foolish.
I've bought two games from G2A in the past (Alien Isolation and COD:AW) i bought it directly from G2A themselves ( In G2A there are two different ways of buying if im correct. you can buy from G2A or from private sellers , who are cheaper but riskier)
If I bought from G2A directly, do the devs still get money? or is there just no way to tell whether or not keys are stolen?
They actually talk a bit in that twitter thread, but no idea if they resolved anything with them afterwards.
Personally I bought 1 game from G2A, Lords of the Fallen, and no issues so far. Worked and works as it should. I am probably not going to be buying from them again though, without verifying first the validity of the key with devs.
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I bought one game from Kinguin when I was out of my country for holidays and they required me to verify my account through some steps because of the unusual location. I have always had good support from them and no problems whatsoever. The site looks legit, all keys works, everyone reccomended it to me so I don't see how I should be punished for it. Just don't accept the games anymore not take away what people already paid for.
Consumers should bother to think before buying.
Fair enough if they're only cancelling keys which were not bought legitimately, but doesn't seem very fair if they're cancelling every key on that site considering how it's basically just a big marketplace which some people may use to get rid of keys they don't want. Don't know how they'd be able to tell though.
I bought one game from Kinguin when I was out of my country for holidays and they required me to verify my account through some steps because of the unusual location. I have always had good support from them and no problems whatsoever. The site looks legit, all keys works, everyone reccomended it to me so I don't see how I should be punished for it. Just don't accept the games anymore not take away what people already paid for.
Just like these companies do everything they can to get money out of customers with shady practices, like releasing broken games and cutting out pieces of games to sell as DLC, customers are also allowed to pursue the lowest possible price. It's not their job to police the internet. If I find a good deal then I'm taking it. At the end of the day I'm just trying to save money and if I really wanted to be shady I'd just pirate the game. These companies already have an army of lawyers looking out for their interests, they don't need customers like you doing it for them.
You didn't pay Ubisoft. If your key is revoked you should talk to the site who sold it to you. They sold you a faulty key, not Ubisoft.
I dont know if they are removing all keys from the site. Some folks in here seem to be suggesting that their games are fine.
Just like these companies do everything they can to get money out of customers with shady practices, like releasing broken games and cutting out pieces of games to sell as DLC, customers are also allowed to pursue the lowest possible price. It's not their job to police the internet. If I find a good deal then I'm taking it. At the end of the day I'm just trying to save money and if I really wanted to be shady I'd just pirate the game. These companies already have an army of lawyers looking out for their interests, they don't need customers like you doing it for them.
I thought G2A was a legit place because of all these top twitch streamers using it and i used G2A to get a game like a year ago and then found out on GAF that it's a scummy piece of shit site and immediately went and bought it again for full retail cost because i felt like shit.I don't know why G2A is advertised by the majority of top twitch streamers when it is known to be selling illegitimate keys. Even Cloud9 is sponsored by them.