!!!!!!crimsonheadGCN said:The original Supreme Commander will be up on Steam today most likely:
this is good news
!!!!!!crimsonheadGCN said:The original Supreme Commander will be up on Steam today most likely:
Dude, you abide by the laws in the country where you do business. Don't know about this case though.Mrbob said:Go for it. Valve will ban your account for attempting to abuse this law.
Since Valve is based in the USA I don't know if they have to abide by European Union law anyway. Probably just refunded Worms Reloaded just to avoid future headaches. 20 bucks isn't worth a long term hassle.
Archie said:Let it be known I fucking love Steam Cloud. I reinstalled Puzzle Quest 2 a few nights ago and was surprised to see a character I created 9 months ago still there and ready to play.
Ledsen said:Dude, you abide by the laws in the country where you do business. Don't know about this case though.
EU Directives don't apply to consumers or businesses (there are certain exceptions which don't come into play here), they need to be transformed into national law of the Member States. There are fully harmonizing directives (at least in some regards) but in general Member States have a certain freedom within the framework of a Directive. For instance in Germany you have 14 days for the right of withdrawal instead of 7 (the Directive says at least 7 days).Dascu said:- Redacted -
Ah, I'm mistaken. It only applies to EU sellers (odd, I remember differently). So Mrbob is correct actually. Steam sales should not fall under the EU directive, seeing how the USA is not an EU member state. There's different Steam stores though. I wonder if a case could be made that if you buy from the Euro or UK store, that you're effectively buying from a trader established in the EU (note: Steam being based in the USA doesn't mean that it can't have foreign offices or establishments). They have servers here in Europe too, no? I should ask one of my professors if we have a case here.
So yeah, the EU directive shouldn't apply and that one guy apparently got lucky.
gdt5016 said:Finally started up Civ 5. Really enjoyed it, but obviously I was sucking. Initiated war with a city-state wayy too early, my units got massacred. Then I lost all my gold. I'll start another game maybe tonight.
Oh an it's very helpful. Makes it easy for a newcomer. Extremely addictive too.
Next time I'll make sure to strengthen a small city first. Expand, then go to war (if I want).
Get both.DyslexicAlucard said:I need your opinion, Steam-GAF.
Should I get Space Marine for $20, or RAGE for $33?
Chesskid1 said:GMG giving away copies of Battlefield 2
not steam but wanted to share with my PC brethren
http://forums.greenmangaming.com/topic/850/
Space Marine is a must-buy at $20.DyslexicAlucard said:I need your opinion, Steam-GAF.
Should I get Space Marine for $20, or RAGE for $33?
DMPrince said:Get both.
DyslexicAlucard said:I need your opinion, Steam-GAF.
Should I get Space Marine for $20, or RAGE for $33?
Get RAGE at that price. since you missed out on Space marine when it launched may as well wait for another sale later on steam. it might be cheaper or other place.DyslexicAlucard said:I'm trying not to ><
dsmoke1986 said:Where are you seeing these deals? GMG?
jaundicejuice said:Looks like my total time with Sanctum was only 12 hours, whoops. Whatever. I'll give this stuff a shot.
Also, not that anyone cares, but Nuclear Dawn came out today as well. I pre-ordered it on a whim a while back, curious to see how active the game is. 233 people right now according to Steam, yikes.
dsmoke1986 said:Where are you seeing these deals? GMG?
filipe said:Wondering myself.
Zimbardo said:must be one of these places ...
http://intkeys.com/
http://buygamecdkeys.com/specials.html
some tempting prices, but i keep thinking that if i register one of those keys on Steam that i might be stepping around the Steam Terms of Service.
i don't wanna chance getting those games disabled, or worse yet, my account disabled.
Ledsen said:This has never ever happened in this context, so you have nothing to worry about. The only thing that happened was that people who bought MW2 got their games removed because Activision are huge asses.
Blizzard said:I have come to the realization that since Joe Molotov buys any Steam game, ever, whether it be Nancy Drew (which I bought) or John Deere's Ultra Farm Mowing Simulator, you should REALLY pay attention when he says a game is terrible. =P
Joe Molotov said:No, it's shitty as hell.
Zimbardo said:must be one of these places ...
http://intkeys.com/
http://buygamecdkeys.com/specials.html
some tempting prices, but i keep thinking that if i register one of those keys on Steam that i might be stepping around the Steam Terms of Service.
i don't wanna chance getting those games disabled, or worse yet, my account disabled.
I know. But this Directive ensures a minimum level of protection (like 7 days withdrawal right) and it's simpler to work with that. I suppose it's possible for an internal national law to claim that it's also in effect with regards to non-EU member states, but then you'd have to check country by country.Phife Dawg said:EU Directives don't apply to consumers or businesses (there are certain exceptions which don't come into play here), they need to be transformed into national law of the Member States. There are fully harmonizing directives (at least in some regards) but in general Member States have a certain freedom within the framework of a Directive. For instance in Germany you have 14 days for the right of withdrawal instead of 7 (the Directive says at least 7 days).
Downloadable software falls under the Directive as far as I know. Not sure about electricityThere are also legal uncertainties regarding the right of withdrawal and DD. There are exceptions for goods that cannot be returned. Are DD such goods? A similar problem occurs when delivering grid energy (electricity, natural gas) for instance. Steam is interesting in that regard because they can remove/return your ability to play. This question is not played out yet and could go either way.
The applicability and terms still depend on the national law and you will have to check country by country anyway.Dascu said:I know. But this Directive ensures a minimum level of protection (like 7 days withdrawal right) and it's simpler to work with that. I suppose it's possible for an internal national law to claim that it's also in effect with regards to non-EU member states, but then you'd have to check country by country.
The question is whether DD are goods that can not be returned (or computer software which was unsealed for that matter). If so then the right of withdrawal does not apply. In terms of compatibility of national with EU law this question has not been decided yet. There was a request for interpretation from the Federal Court of Justice (Germany) to the Court of Justice of the EU but the request became moot due to a settlement.Downloadable software falls under the Directive as far as I know. Not sure about electricity
Ok, got the key and I was able to activate it without problems. If anyone is interested in Arkham City go get a steam key from ebay. It just costs ~$30 which is a great deal, especially for EU and AUS.froliq said:Gonna get myself an Arkham City steam key from ebay. I assume the code is not region locked? The promotion is avaible in my country, but since I'll be buying from someone who got a Nvidia card in the US, it'll be an US code? Or I can just redeem the steam key from the US section of the Nvidia page and it'll work on my EU steam account?
Don't think I've heard anything about region locking with this game and I might be overthinking it, but still would love to hear a conformation if anyone knows before I buy.
In practice? Yes. For an internet discussion? Hell if I'll bother with that.Phife Dawg said:The applicability and terms still depend on the national law and you will have to check country by country anyway.
Always sucks when an important question gets brought before the Court of Justice and then they avoid answering it somehow. Lazy bums.The question is whether DD are goods that can not be returned (or computer software which was unsealed for that matter). If so then the right of withdrawal does not apply. In terms of compatibility of national with EU law this question has not been decided yet. There was a request for interpretation from the Federal Court of Justice (Germany) to the Court of Justice of the EU but the request became moot due to a settlement.
It uses the Aurora Engine which is the old ass engine that NWN used and doesn't take advantage of multi-core CPUs(only uses one core).Le-mo said:Since the Witcher OT is dead I'll post my question here. why can't I play this with maxed setting without stuttering and framerate drop? I'm running it on a HD Radeon 6950, Amd Athlon X4, Windows 7 64-bit ultimate and 8GB of ram. What gives. I should clarify that I am playing the 1st Witcher, not Assassin's of the King.
So is there a way to fix the stuttering and framerate drop or am I stuck playing it like this? Will lowering the settings help?CrookedRain said:It uses the Aurora Engine which is the old ass engine that NWN used and doesn't take advantage of multi-core CPUs(only uses one core).
LastWindow said:Eh, I played a bit [of Daggerdale] on the 360 and thought it was an alright time killer. For $7.50 I'll bite.
Le-mo said:Since the Witcher OT is dead I'll post my question here. why can't I play this with maxed setting without stuttering and framerate drop? I'm running it on a HD Radeon 6950, Amd Athlon X4, Windows 7 64-bit ultimate and 8GB of ram. What gives. I should clarify that I am playing the 1st Witcher, not Assassin's of the King.
Is this a common issue? I mean I had no problem playing all of my Steam games on maxed setting (Assassin's Creed II, Darksiders, BioShock, Left 4 Dead 2, Alpha Protocol, Sniper: Ghost Warrior and Medal of Honor). I'll lower the settings when I play it again in a few minutes to see if that fixes the problem.vocab said:Turn shadows way down. Turn draw distance down. turn off AA. Try d3d overidder. I have the same shit. Though it runs a lot better than it did when I first tried the game. All those settings take a huge performance hit.
I lol'd at "Tappled" supportSysgen said:Don't know about the game but this thread in the game's forum sure is awesome.
Windows 8 wont even start
Le-mo said:Is this a common issue?
jim-jam bongs said:Yes, as someone said earlier the Aurora Engine is a filthy, lazy mongrel cur. My system with a low-clocked i5 runs it horribly no matter what I do, a less modern system with a high-clocked dual core CPU ran it at twice the framerate. It's just a weird engine.
Edit: and what the fuck does tappled mean?
Tappled = tabletjim-jam bongs said:Yes, as someone said earlier the Aurora Engine is a filthy, lazy mongrel cur. My system with a low-clocked i5 runs it horribly no matter what I do, a less modern system with a high-clocked dual core CPU ran it at twice the framerate. It's just a weird engine.
Edit: and what the fuck does tappled mean?
was there like last week or so during its "beta"HadesGigas said:
HadesGigas said:
HadesGigas said: