Ubisoft would be in trouble if their consumers bothered thinking before buying.Consumers should bother to think before buying.
What do you mean more money? It would be the first time they see any money.I can't help but think Ubisoft are going about this the wrong way. It would be far better in the short and long term for Ubisoft and co to go after the resellers. It is obvious these resellers are illegal and breaking the law so might I suggest Ubisoft goes after THEM. Oh wait that would probably be too much like hardwork and it is far easier to just disable keys willy nilly and hey some saps will just go and buy the game again which means more money for them.
Was about to say this.
I don't use steam often so I wouldn't know, still never heard of a 50% pre-order deal for a huge fall release though.
Exactly only buy from a website like GMG they do enough of promotions like 25% off voucher on a new game or 20%. Seeing how Levelcap is promoting this is just awkward to see and he didn't even explore why there not a official website retailer.
Why do they have to be in bulk? Legitimate stores that sell keys allow you to order more than one thing.
Is it:
1. Regional pricing exploit
2. stolen keys
3. keys purchased in bulk with a stolen CC
You know we have no confirmation whatsoever where or not Ubisoft is investigating and pursuing the resellers who purchased illegal keys. That being said, customers who use these sites are completely innocent considering the means they used to purchase a key.I can't help but think Ubisoft are going about this the wrong way. It would be far better in the short and long term for Ubisoft and co to go after the resellers. It is obvious these resellers are illegal and breaking the law so might I suggest Ubisoft goes after THEM. Oh wait that would probably be too much like hardwork and it is far easier to just disable keys willy nilly and hey some saps will just go and buy the game again which means more money for them.
At any rate it doesn't affect me. I don't buy from resellers simply on the basis "it looks too good to be true" and I definitely don't buy Ubisoft shit, my life as a PC gamer is so much simpler now I don't deal with Ubisoft in any way.
Statements like this add absolutely nothing to the discussion whatsoever. Get out with that nonsense.Ubisoft would be in trouble if their consumers bothered thinking before buying.
What do you mean more money? It would be the first time they see any money.
And if they are storefront that was defrauded then a legitimate purchase would just offset costs they already had to cover with credit card companies.
You know we have no confirmation whatsoever where or not Ubisoft is investigating and pursuing the resellers who purchased illegal keys. That being said, customers who use these sites are completely innocent considering the means they used to purchase a key.
We had a GAFfer that confirmed to the administrator to have been defrauded and had his stolen keys sold on other platforms.That seems like a lot of leg work.
I'm not cyber CC thief, but I would think that there's a better racket to maximize value out of a stolen CC # than video game keys.
It seems much much more plausible that this is exploiting regional pricing.
A lot of these sites have operated for many years. You'd think the crime well would run dry or at the least not have a continually available stock of every new release on release day.
Why isn't regional pricing the most logical explanation? The prices line up almost perfectly with the lowest steam or retail prices of games in developing economies. You'd think if they were all stolen they'd just corner the market with $9 GTA5 keys.
The buyer just goes to the seller that his key was disabled .They even have disclaimer that if that happens we'll cover for you because they know they engage in shady shit.I mean going after the resellers would cost them a fuck load of money but just disabling the keys means the consumer has to go and buy the game again which would mean Ubisoft get money instead of having to spend money in litigation against these resellers.
And have been banned on GAF for years for exactly what happens to people that get the access to their games revoked.They are taking their fucking sweet time about it then. These resellers have been around for years.
We had a GAFfer that confirmed to the administrator to have been defrauded and had his stolen keys sold on other platforms.
But continue to think this is just regional pricing and Ubisoft, Unknown Worlds and Devolver are the bad guys here.
Is it:
1. Regional pricing exploit
2. stolen keys
3. keys purchased in bulk with a stolen CC
Considering even steam makes preorder deals reducing price by ~25% up to 50% off shouldn't be all that unreasonable.
Considering my copy of HoMM6 wasn't taken away it seems like ubisoft blanket deactivated in fact just stolen keys which is perfectly legitimate.
All of the above actually! They buy CDs in Russia in bulk for shit cheap, get rid of the CDs and sell the keys instead. Some are stolen, and some are pricing exploit.
That said, it's quite hard to get into retail partnership with the developers/publishers so they resort to this. However, the developers are in the right to cancel the keys (sadly?) as it clearly violates the terms of services.
Wow G2A isn't legit?
I didn't buy anything from them, but this is all interesting news.
Wow G2A isn't legit?
I didn't buy anything from them, but this is all interesting news.
Ubisoft is laying the blame at the consumer while its the reseller that's the culprit, go after them.
How does this differ from buying boxed games on eBay from an unknown seller?
am ok with this. as long as nuuvem is still intact.
Not different; it's the same thing and those keys may get removed as well.
But people don't make blanket statements about all games from ebay being stolen and shopping on ebay contributes to game theft.
G2A is a marketplace, some of the resellers on G2A aren't legit some of them are.
Not really, it's not legit at all. Legit resellers are sites like Steam, GMG, Nuuvem, GetGamesGO, etc.
Again, there's no indication that they're not doing this, but obviously they shouldn't allow illegal keys. Especially since it doesn't seem to be a bulk ban but only for those with illegal keys.if ubisoft has a problem with g2a, they should sue for whatever damages they see fit. Not attack end users trying to play your video game, cause g2a still gets away with whatever they are being accused of.
whos to say what is legitimate and what isnt?
I think actually G2A could help out immensely by simply removing anonymous users. Like Ebay, force a reseller to have an account shown as the seller. This would enable Ubisoft to go after the reseller rather than the site and the customer.
And how do you know they are not also doing this?if ubisoft has a problem with g2a, they should sue for whatever damages they see fit. Not attack end users trying to play your video game, cause g2a still gets away with whatever they are being accused of.
Not really, it's not legit at all. Legit resellers are sites like Steam, GMG, Nuuvem, GetGamesGO, etc.
Not really, it's not legit at all. Legit resellers are sites like Steam, GMG, Nuuvem, GetGamesGO, etc.
And how do you know they are not also doing this?
whos to say what is legitimate and what isnt?
We are dangerously close to piracy excuses here.Why would i? With dlc etc it feels like you are paying for half a game any way why not pay half price on day 1 and if you like the game buy the dlc.
I can't help but think Ubisoft are going about this the wrong way. It would be far better in the short and long term for Ubisoft and co to go after the resellers. It is obvious these resellers are illegal and breaking the law so might I suggest Ubisoft goes after THEM. Oh wait that would probably be too much like hardwork and it is far easier to just disable keys willy nilly and hey some saps will just go and buy the game again which means more money for them.
At any rate it doesn't affect me. I don't buy from resellers simply on the basis "it looks too good to be true" and I definitely don't buy Ubisoft shit, my life as a PC gamer is so much simpler now I don't deal with Ubisoft in any way.
Legitimate sites are authorized to sell the games. G2A isn't.
Legitimate sites are authorized to sell the games. G2A isn't.
Relax. It was a joke, not a statement. Low hanging fruit and all that.Statements like this add absolutely nothing to the discussion whatsoever. Get out with that nonsense.
If they were authorised they wouldn't be selling stolen keys.
G2A and Kinguin are marketplaces, basically an ebay specifically made for key selling. Some sellers on them may be selling cheap copies from regions like Russia, India, South America and so on where the prices are cheaper. Other sellers may have stolen them, by buying a bunch of keys and charging back.
None of them are authorised by Valve.
1.We should wait for official confirmation about whether or not they're looking into the site itself and also consmers should also look into the site and take it up with the reseller they got their now banned key from.What a shitty move if true, punishing gamers instead of those that sell the keys. My mind is blown they can just remove a game from your library and Ubisoft would actually do this. They should look into how their keys end up with unauthorized sellers in the first place.
Then gaf is illegal? We have a marketplace here where people sell keys as well.
Steam GMG nuuvem are all partners with Ubisoft and have ubisoft badge on there page. G2A on the other hand does not
These are basically auction sites, so who are they going to go after? G2A will likely claim they have no way of knowing a key is legit or not and insist that they dont endorse illegally obtained product. It'd be like going after torrent sites. The unfortunate truth is that the more effective approach is to revoke the copies and discourage people from dealing with those sites.